Angel Reese was just happy to be back on the court. After weeks sidelined with a back injury, she returned Tuesday night against the Storm.
She didn’t ease her way back, either. On a minutes restriction, Reese stuffed the stat sheet with 19 points, seven rebounds and four assists. Her presence gave the Sky an edge, sparking the kind of spirited runs they simply weren’t making during her absence. And though they ultimately fell 94-88, it was the most dangerous they’d looked in weeks.
“We were more locked into each other today, and it felt good to have that,” Ariel Atkins said after the game.
Head coach Tyler Marsh added: “[Reese] being back not only adds to our versatility but our overall feel and confidence and morale of everyone around her.”
But beneath Reese’s return to the court, another story was humming.
Even by the league’s new “don’t ask, don’t tell” standard of injury reporting, Reese’s absence has been unusually opaque. Head coach Tyler Marsh has offered little beyond vague timelines, often sounding not entirely in the loop himself. Other dynamics only deepened the mystery: she didn’t attend two road trips, missed a shootaround, and even missed a home game.
Reese is usually at the center of the action, injured or not. That she wasn’t this time felt uncharacteristic — and hinted at a deeper discord.
Before the game, speaking to reporters for the first time since July 29, she seemed to confirm as much. Asked how her recovery went, she replied, “I’ll speak on that after the season.” Asked about her return: “Put all the bulls— to the side, I wanna hoop.”
The comments were enough to make Sky fans shift in their seats. In Chicago, history doesn’t repeat — but it sure does rhyme.
High-profile players getting fed up with the Sky organization has become a genre unto itself: Sylvia Fowles, Elena Delle Donne and Kahleah Copper have all asked to be traded. Even hometown hero Candace Parker chose Vegas over a Chicago sendoff.
Which isn’t to say Angel Reese is plotting her exit. Her comments could just signal a minor tension in an otherwise healthy marriage. They also could signal an internal struggle, rather than one with the organization.
“Sitting on the sidelines is no fun,” Reese said after the game. “Doing rehab every single day is no fun. Just sitting figuring out what’s going on with myself. I learned a lot about myself for the last three, four weeks. But I’m just super grateful for everybody that was in my corner — my teammates, my coaches that were here for me through the whole process.”
It’s also worth repeating that secrecy around injuries isn’t unique to Reese, or even Chicago. League-wide, teams have pulled back on transparency. Within the Sky, Ariel Atkins’ calf injury came with few details — and she, too, missed a couple of road trips.
Still, Reese’s pregame comments confirmed that something in her recovery process was bumpy. And for fans, the Sky’s history makes every bump feel like the wheels might be coming off — especially when it involves their lone All-Star, the cornerstone of the rebuild.
Reese isn’t just the Sky’s best player; she’s their path forward. She leads the league in rebounds, drives the offense and has become the face of the franchise.
After the game, Marsh emphasized that Reese’s experience during her absence is hers to share. His role, he said, is to support her.
“Angel’s in a position that not many of us are in, on or off the court,” Marsh said. “Some of the things that she deals with, we just got to be there to support her. It’s hard to put yourself in her shoes at times for the stuff that comes her way.”