Northwestern product Veronica Burton powers into Most Improved Player conversation

Now that the Valkyries are escalating their playoff push, coach Natalie Nakase decided she needed more from her point guard. She asked Veronica Burton to start, in her words, “MF–ing people.”

Burton didn’t flinch at the request — she understood the desire for more energy and accountability in practice. But she reminded her coach she’s more about encouragement and positivity, and wanted to do it her way. Nakase was fine with that. That’s what she likes about Burton.

New role, same Veronica.

That role is starting point guard for the Valkyries, who just set the record for most wins by an expansion team. Burton is a core part of that, just a year removed from being waived by the team that drafted her seventh out of Northwestern.

“To go from [being waived] last year to now you’re on a new expansion team, with new teammates that I told her she has to command and demand within training camp,” Nakase said. “That isn’t easy.”

Nakase is sure this kind of leap is deserving of the Most Improved Player award, and even opposing coaches are beginning to say Burton is in the mix.

But the rise didn’t come out of nowhere. Burton has always been recognized for her defense. At Northwestern, she led the nation in steals and once held Big Ten rival Caitlin Clark to her only single-digit scoring game.

Her college coach, Joe McKeown, says she has all the classic traits of a great defender: always one step ahead, sharpened by two competitive older sisters, driven by preparation. He calls her mindset rare, the kind that made an impression on veterans even before the box scores did.

In Connecticut, Alyssa Thomas remembers Burton never taking a play off, always pressuring the ball no matter how tired she was.

“That gets a lot of respect,” Thomas told the Sun-Times.

Her other memory of last season: telling Burton to shoot.

Over her first three seasons, Burton averaged just two shots a game. She couldn’t find consistent looks. Her defense got her on the floor, but her offense didn’t keep her there.

This year is a completely different story. She’s breaking down defenses with her quickness, getting to the rim for her own shots as well as creating for others. She’s averaging 11.2 points and five assists per game.

A core part of the Valkyries’ attack is putting defenses in rotation and then lighting it up from outside, where they lead the league with 30 three-point attempts per game. Burton has fit right in, though many weren’t sure she would.

When she entered the league, her range was a question mark. She scored plenty in college, but her 3-point percentage never stood out. Coaches wondered if her game could stretch to a league where outside shooting is a must.

McKeown never doubted it. He’d shagged enough balls in practice to know the numbers were misleading — weighed down by rushed, late-clock attempts. Earlier this season, he told the Sun-Times she could be a 40% shooter in the pros despite a career average of 33%.

Now she’s proving him right. Burton is hitting 38.9% from three, top 10 in the league among players with at least four attempts per game. Her first 30-point game against the Mystics last week? A blistering 6-for-9 from deep.

As Burton’s role elevates, she’s had to adjust her preparation. She’s playing 28 minutes a night now, more than double last season. The extra load means more time spent on recovery, fewer of the extra workouts she used to sneak in.

Not that she’s at risk of going soft.

Before the Valkyries’ blowout of the Sky on Friday night, the Sun-Times asked their leading scorer Tiffany Hayes what Burton’s influence has been.

“She showed me what hard work looks like,” Hayes said. “Seeing it every day from her as a young player, that kinda motivates me.”

She laughed, realizing that in her 13th season, she’s seen what hard work looks like before. But something about Burton is different.

Consistency, not just defense, is her calling card now. Not only has it put her in the Most Improved Player conversation, it’s helped the Valkyries climb toward history. If they reach the postseason, they’ll be the first to ever do it — with Burton at the helm.

“She’s leveling up on everybody, just doing it times 10,” Hayes said.

No MF’ing required.

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