The Los Angeles Sparks can add a list for a brand new basic supervisor to LinkedIn.
On Sunday, the team confirmed it is parting methods with third-year GM Raegan Pebley. Assistant GMs Zach Knowlton and Nate Nielsen will function interims.
Sparks launch assertion on firing of Raegan Pebley
“We’re grateful to Raegan and her management and dedication to the Los Angeles Sparks and ladies’s basketball,” managing companion and governor Eric Holoman mentioned. “Her work on the Sparks roster and participant expertise can have a long-lasting affect on our group. We sincerely thank her for all she has invested within the Sparks and want her success in her subsequent chapter.”
Hiring Pebley was a questionable determination for the Sparks. The previous Colorado Buffaloes star performed within the WNBA from 1997-98 in stints with the Utah Starzz (now Las Vegas Aces) and Cleveland Rockers. She subsequently served as head coach for the Utah State Aggies,
Fresno State Bulldogs and TCU Horned Frogs from 2003-23. However she lacked one key qualification: front-office expertise.
That confirmed at occasions throughout her tenure, notably together with her scouting. Of the six gamers the Sparks chosen within the 2024 and 2025 WNBA Drafts, just one (ahead Cameron Brink) stays on the roster. Brink, after all, has battled ACL and ankle points, which have prevented her from reaching her ceiling.
Now, Pebley did usher in some wanted star energy, buying guard Kelsey Plum in a three-team commerce with the Aces and Seattle Storm earlier than the 2025 season. In two seasons with the Sparks, Plum has averaged 20.5 factors per sport and has been chosen to the All-Star Recreation twice.
In the end, Pebley did not discover sufficient gamers like Plum. The workforce went 39-66 below the GM. L.A. entered Sunday with a 10-11 file and ninth within the WNBA standings, placing it able to overlook the playoffs for a sixth consecutive season.
The firing of Pebley ends one other disappointing chapter for the Sparks, who’ve struggled to recapture the glory days of the 2000s, after they received two of their three championships and featured stars like ahead Candace Parker and middle Lisa Leslie. They hope their subsequent GM may also help them replicate the success from that happier time.
Maybe L.A. ought to begin by focusing on a candidate with an in depth front-office background. Pebley did not have that, which contributed to her lack of ability to construct a perennial championship contender.
