A thumbnail for the Locked On Women's Basketball podcast, with an upper title of "Top Talent In 5 Yrs." and a lower title of "All-Stars in 2030 ", below pictures from left to right of UConn's Sarah Strong, the Indiana Fever's Caitlin Clark and USC's JuJu Watkins.
Where will Sarah Strong (left), Caitlin Clark (center) and JuJu Watkins (right) rank among the WNBA elites in the 2030 season? (Photo Credits: David Butler II | Imagn Images (L); Darren Yamashita | Imagn Images (C); Jeffrey Becker | Imagn Images (R))

On this edition of the Locked On Womenโ€™s Basketball podcastโ€™s prospect series, the duo of Hunter Cruse and Lincoln Shafer look ahead five years, projecting out who the top WNBA players will be in 2030.

Cruse and Shafer discuss the outlook for 2025’s top rookies like Paige Bueckers in Dallas and Dominique Malonga in Seattle, which current stars will still be reigning at the top of the league, and the wave of college prospects who will begin their professional careers in the intervening five seasons, like USC’s JuJu Watkins and UConn’s Sarah Strong.

Shafer explaining why his predicted No. 1 overall player in 2030 is Sarah Strong:

[Sarah Strong] is everything you could possibly ask for in a basketball player. She’s a good 3-point shooter. She scores incredibly efficiently inside the arc. She’s a good passer and an elite defender. Sarah strong is my best bet for who the best player in the world will be in five years. … That age 24, age 25 season is when all timers really show that they’re all timers.


Photo of the cover of "Becoming Caitlin Clark," a new book written by Howard Megdal.

“Becoming Caitlin Clark” is out now!

Howard Megdal’s newest book is here! “Becoming Caitlin Clark: The Unknown Origin Story of a Modern Basketball Superstar” captures both the historic nature of Clark’s rise and the critical context over the previous century that helped make it possible, including interviews with Clark, Lisa Bluder (who also wrote the foreword), C. Vivian Stringer, Jan Jensen, Molly Kazmer and many others.


Cruse on why he thinks Angel Reese‘s floor makes her a perennial WNBA All-Star when predicting her as the top player after the first tier of options:

There’s [a couple players] I have ranked higher in terms of upside, but I think her level of floor… I think she’s going to be an All-Star every year. The rebounding, the playmaking growth, the drives improving with the overall role change. So I think Angel is a nice pick here… She’s a little bit younger than those [other] players.

To stay up to date with every episode of the podcast, subscribe on YouTube or wherever you listen to podcasts. Catch up on all our WNBA coverage here, and you can also find our NCAA coverage here.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *