Sparks fall to Chicago Sky on the day L.A. honored Candace Parker

When Candace Parker was on the court, the Sparks were dominant. On the afternoon her jersey was retired, they had a chance to channel that energy β but the Sparks were anything but overpowering.
In a matchup between the two franchises Parker led to WNBA titles β the Sparks and Chicago Sky β her hometown team played spoiler, earning a 92-85 victory at Crypto.com Arena.
Angel Reese, the self-proclaimed queen of βMebounds,β proved too much for L.A. to handle β for the second time in five days.
Reese finished with 16 rebounds, including four on the offensive glass. Her impact extended beyond the boards, with Reese adding 24 points and seven assists.
Reeseβs stat line has been matched by only two other players in WNBA history, both at Crypto.com Arena: Parker and Lisa Leslie.
The Sparks struggled to contain her for most of the game, though forward Emma Cannon gave L.A. a surge off the bench. Undersized Cannon made life difficult for Reese during key stretches, drawing a technical foul during a tense third-quarter exchange in the post.
Cannonβs second-half performance briefly turned the tide. With the Sparks trailing by 12 β their largest deficit of the game β Cannon helped fuel a 24β5 run that put L.A. ahead 60β53. She finished with a season-high 15 points in four minutes.
But the Sky didnβt go away. By the end of the third, the Sparks led just 62β61 β and in the fourth, Chicago closed strong. Behind Reese, the Sky ballooned the lead back to double digits β 82β72 β too much for the Sparks to overcome.
A rally in the final minutes, led by Kelsey Plum, AzurΓ‘ Stevens and Dearica Hamby, fell short.
Plum (22 points), Stevens (17 points) and Hamby (20 points) accounted for the bulk of the Sparksβ offense, combining for 59 of the teamβs 85 points.
Parker honored
The game was a tribute to Parker. At the arena entrance, fans were greeted by a purple and gold floral arrangement shaped like the No. 3. Video messages from Lakers legends, including Magic Johnson and Michael Cooper, played throughout the festivities.
Before Parker received a thunderous ovation as her No. 3 jersey was revealed in the rafters, she addressed the fans.
βThey say athletes have two deaths β one being when your career ends β but I look at it as two lives,β Parker said during her halftime speech. βItβs never easy to put the ball down and move from your first love. Thatβs something I learned throughout my career here through basketball, and Iβm going to carry it into the next phase of life.β

Former Sparks star Candace Parker waves while standing beside her family during her jersey retirement ceremony Sunday at Crypto.com Arena.
(Jessie Alcheh / Associated Press)
Before the game, she also reflected on the full-circle moment β standing in the same arena where she won her first WNBA championship, fittingly against her hometown team, the Chicago Sky. She won a title with the Sky in 2021 and will see her jersey retired by the franchise this August.
βSeeing the No. 3 in the rafters where I first picked up the ball, and where is home now, is incredible,β Parker said. βItβs about dreams and opportunity. β¦ So I hope that that inspires those little girls out there.β
Her jersey is just the third retired in Sparks history, joining former teammate Leslieβs No. 9 and longtime general manager Penny Tolerβs No. 11.
βWhen it was time for me to say goodbye, I knew when I handed the keys to Candace Parker,β said Leslie, who introduced Parker during the halftime jersey retirement ceremony. βShe not only took the key to the building β but she ran with it.β