Despite not having a single pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft, the Phoenix Mercury still ended up with five rookies on the roster, tied with the Connecticut Sun for the most in the league.
Instead of having their pick of the latest college stars and young international standouts, general manager Nick UโRen and the teamโs front office got creative, scouting players from various overseas leagues to fill out the roster.
Most of the teamโs rookies have had their chance to step up and prove their value to their team. Due to injuries, several have gotten chances to make the starting lineup and play key minutes in crunch time.
Overall, despite their limited WNBA experience, Phoenixโs rookies have been one of the most positive surprises for the new-look Mercury.
โI’ve been really impressed with all of them at different times,โ Tibbetts told reporters after practice on May 29. โThey all bring a certain level of toughness, which we love; that’s what we love about them. And then offensively, they’ve got different talents, and they’re trying to find opportunities to be successful.โ
Reliable guards

After the blockbuster trade to acquire Satou Sabally and Alyssa Thomas, and the move to sign Sami Whitcomb, Phoenixโs roster still had a hole at point guard. Although Tibbetts and UโRen emphasized a more positionless style of play that didnโt necessitate having a standout point guard on the team, the roster construction still worried some fans.
Thatโs where Monique Akoa Makani stepped in.
The Cameroonian guard had an efficient season in France, where she averaged 14.9 points on 44.8% 2-point shooting and 41.8% 3-point shooting. She also contributed 4.1 rebounds, 5.6 assists and 3.1 steals per game.
Akoa Makani was an early favorite to make the roster in training camp, earning the start in the Mercuryโs first preseason game. Sheโs built on her performance ever since.
Through six games, Akoa Makani is averaging 9.7 points, 2.3 assists and 1.2 steals. She leads the team and all rookies (with more than one attempt) with a 3-point percentage of 46.4%.
โI think a lot of people in our league are trying to figure out what she can and can’t do. Part of the reason me throwing her out there is I want to figure out what she can and can’t do,โ Tibbetts told the media pregame in Seattle. โI believe in her shooting. She shot 48% this past year in catch-and-shoot situations overseas, so those numbers tell me that she can shoot it.โ
Order ‘Rare Gems’ and save 30%
Howard Megdal, founder and editor of The IX Basketball and The IX Sports, wrote this deeply reported book. “Rare Gems” follows four connected generations of women’s basketball pioneers, from Elvera “Peps” Neuman to Cheryl Reeve and from Lindsay Whalen to Sylvia Fowles and Paige Bueckers.
If you enjoy Megdal’s coverage of women’s basketball every Wednesday at The IX Sports, you will love “Rare Gems: How Four Generations of Women Paved the Way for the WNBA.” Click the link below to order and enter MEGDAL30 at checkout to save 30%!
Her rookie partner in crime in the backcourt is Lexi Held. After a standout career at DePaul, Held received an invite to the Chicago Skyโs training camp in 2022. She didnโt make the cut but went overseas to play professionally.
Following a season in Hungary in which Held averaged 15.5 points, 2.5 assists and 1.8 steals, Phoenix gave her another opportunity to prove she belonged in the WNBA, and Held has capitalized on it since.
Held serves as a sparkplug off the bench, providing consistent defense and a smart shot selection that allows her to take threes in rhythm with the offense or make a break for the hoop and create for herself.
โLexi is a baller,โ Thomas told reporters postgame in Seattle. โShe comes in. She’s fearless. A lot of people don’t know who she is, but she comes out there and plays her game, and I think she surprises a lot of people.โ
Both players have a consistent impact on offense, but itโs their defensive approach that has made them such good fits with Tibbetts’ philosophy and the team.
Akoa Makani and Held are the first line of defense, tag-teaming the opposing teamโs primary ball handler. As soon as the ball crosses half court โ and sometimes even before โ theyโre playing aggressive on-ball defense with active hands and sliding feet. With Akoa Makani and Held typically rotating in and out for each other, thereโs no dropoff in defensive pressure up top.
Held and Akoa Makani got the chance to prove what they were made of in Game 1, splitting time defending the Seattle Stormโs Skylar Diggins. Their second game didnโt get any easier, with the Los Angeles Sparksโ Kelsey Plum being their primary defensive assignment. Still, they faced the challenge head-on, making both players work for every bucket.
โI thought they did great,โ Tibbetts told the media after the season opener. โWe think both of them are super talented, fearless, and they’re going against one of the best guards in the league. โฆ Skylar does a good job of getting into the paint and drawing fouls, and she likes contact, but so does [Monique] and [Lexi]. And so I thought, for the first night home opener, they did a fabulous job.โ
Experienced rookies

While the Mercuryโs backcourt rookies are still relatively young, their two primary frontcourt rookies, forward Kathryn Westbeld and wing Kitija Laksa, have plenty of high-level basketball experience under their belts at age 29.
After finishing her career at Notre Dame, Westbeld competed for a spot on the Sparksโ roster in 2018 to no avail. Since, sheโs been building a resume of professional experience all over the world. Her latest stint was in Hungary, where she averaged 18.4 points on 55.6% shooting from inside the arc, 7.8 rebounds and 2.3 assists.
Following the announcement that Natasha Mack would miss the first two to three weeks of the season, Phoenix bumped Westbeld up into the starting center spot. Additionally, her versatility has allowed her to fill any of the three frontcourt roles.
โKat has probably played more five overseas,โ Tibbetts said pregame against Chicago. โThe question was, was she going to be able to handle the physicality of the W, but I think for her, she has the ability to play the five, the four and the three โฆ Her toughness and just her willingness to fight and just recognizing help, that doesn’t get talked about a lot. She doesn’t have great size, but she makes up for it with her brain and her anticipation.โ
Westbeld has contributed where needed, averaging 6.7 points, 4.0 rebounds and a team-high 1.2 blocks, which also leads all rookies.
โI wouldn’t say she’s like this elite-level rim protector,โ Tibbetts said postgame versus the Washington Mystics. โBut she understands space, and she does a great job of verticality. When you’re inside the restricted area, you have that space and can go straight up and down.โ

“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.
Laksaโs path to her rookie season is a winding road thatโs worked out so far for her and the Mercury. In 2020, she was drafted 11th overall to the Storm out of South Florida, but decided to have her contract suspended. The next season, she was waived, but got picked up by Dallas in 2023. Again, she made the personal decision to sit out. Dallas gave up her rights last season, clearing the way for Phoenix to sign her to a protected one-year deal this past offseason.
โThe dream since college was to play in the W,โ Laksa said after her debut. โToday, I’m 29 years old and making my debut. So there has been a bunch of reasons why I probably haven’t been here before. I was waiting for the right place, for the right time, and this is the right place and this is the right time. So it’s a great opportunity for me to take pride in it, to be a Phoenix Mercury.โ
Despite arriving late due to overseas commitments and missing the first game, Laksa has slotted in well. She adds depth at the wing, an important spot to fill while Kahleah Copper recovers from a left knee arthroscopy. Laksa is shooting 38.1% from three on 4.2 perimeter shots a game, the most by any of Phoenixโs bench players. Sheโs also contributed 7.4 points per contest.
Against Chicago, she had a breakout game, going 6-for-9 from the field to finish with 18 points off the bench. Friday, in Thomasโs absence, she made her first career start.
โShe’s a shooter. She’s a sniper,โ Tibbetts said after Laksaโs debut against Los Angeles. โThat’s why we’re excited about her. She’s going to give our really good players space, and she knows how to play. She’s got good positional size.โ
Sharpshooters

All four of Phoenixโs rookies who average over 18 minutes per game have set themselves apart with their unique skillsets, but something they all have in common is the ability to light it up from 3-point land.
Together, theyโre shooting 39% from the perimeter, almost doubling the 20.9% conversion rate the teamโs players with at least a year of experience have.
By filling up the cup from the outside, the rookies are fulfilling Tibbettsโ and UโRenโs vision of having shooters around Thomas to facilitate the ball to.
โCredit to Phoenix. They did their research,โ Thomas said postgame against Chicago. โBefore coming here, they told me they were going out there to find shooters, and they definitely delivered on that.โ
Against Chicago, Thomas tied the franchise single-game record for assists with 15. Nine of those assists came on made 3-pointers by the rookies.
That game also saw Akoa Makani, Held, Laksa and Westbeld all make three perimeter shots, the first time four rookies had done that in WNBA history.
Not only can they make shots in flow with the offense, but theyโre also capable of hitting them when the pressure is on. To beat the Mystics, Akoa Makani and Westbeld provided critical makes down the stretch that helped lift Phoenix to the 68-62 win.
โI missed a few before that,โ Westbeld said postgame. โSo you just got to keep telling yourself, just keep shooting the ball. You can’t get in your head about missing those shots. It’s all about the next shot. And my teammates and everyone’s so confident in me to keep shooting the ball. And AT found me on the wing again, and I just let it fly.โ
These four playersโ ability to make shots has earned them the trust of the coaching staff and the veteran players on the floor around them.
โI think that’s the fun part of basketball and sports is building belief, building trust, in the person next to you,โ Tibbetts said pregame against the Sky. โIt says a lot about AT with under a minute to go to drive it and kick it out to Kat in the corner, and her hit a big three. โฆ And then the next possession, AT coming off, throwing it to Satou. Satou drives the nail, and Mo’s wide open, and Moโs there ready to knock it down. And so we want to win games, we want to compete, but we also want a group that believes in each other.โ
As Phoenix struggles with injuries, the play of their first-year players becomes even more crucial. After six games, thereโs far more knowledge around the league of what these players are capable of, but if they can continue to play at a high level, Phoenix may have found the perfect mixture of players to support their Big 3.
โAs some of our younger players, or newer players to the W, get more minutes, it’s going to get harder because now you’re on a scouting report, and maybe they didn’t think you could play because they just maybe never heard of you,โ Tibbetts said pregame versus the Mystics. โAnd so they’re getting opportunities with some of the injuries that we’ve had, and that’s the exciting part, is now we’re going to get to see how they play when people know who they are, and can they still get it done.โ
