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Fridayโ€™s game between the Washington Mystics and the Connecticut Sun marks an early milestone in the WNBA season. Yes, it is a 2019 WNBA Finals rematch, but the ultimate significance of this game is that it is the first matchup of sisters this season. Mystics forward Erica McCall will face older sister and Sun forward/guard DeWanna Bonner for the eighth time in their careers.

Bonner has a 6-1 record in those head-to-head matchups, but McCall has a short memory. โ€œLast year was my first time ever beating her, so I’m hoping to keep the train rolling,โ€ she toldย The Nextย in the offseason.

In total, six players have a sister who is also in the WNBA this season, and Bonner and McCall are the only duo who play for different teams. Brionna and Stephanie Jones play with Bonner in Connecticut, while Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike play for the Los Angeles Sparks. That means that nine regular-season games will feature sisters on both sides:

(An honorable mention goes to Karlie and Katie Lou Samuelson, who played in Spain together this past offseason but saw only Katie Lou stick on a WNBA roster for 2021.)

Ahead of the first sister showdown this season, letโ€™s look at how each pair of sisters has performed so far and what their bond is like on and off the court. Unless otherwise stated, all statistics are from Basketball-Reference for games through May 26.

DeWanna Bonner, Connecticut Sun, and Erica McCall, Washington Mystics

Bonnerโ€™s 2021 statistics (6 games played):ย 18.7 points, 6.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists in 32.8 minutes per game; 53.6 percent shooting from 3-point range

McCallโ€™s 2021 statistics (5 games played):ย 7.4 points, 8.0 rebounds and 1.0 assists in 22.0 minutes per game; 53.8 percent shooting from the field

Bonner and McCall are exactly eight years apartโ€”they share an Aug. 21 birthdayโ€”so they never had the option to play together in college. They havenโ€™t yet played together in the WNBA, and they never even played one-on-one growing up, as they lived in separate households in Alabama (Bonner) and California (McCall). But this past offseason, Bonner joined Atomerล‘mลฑ KSC Szekszรกrd in Hungary, the team McCall has played with for the last four years.

โ€œThat was our first real basketball interaction with each other, so it was a long, long time in the making,โ€ McCall told reporters on Thursday. โ€œโ€ฆ I absolutely loved it. I was kind of nervous, though, because โ€ฆ sheโ€™s an incredible player and so for me to have the opportunity to play with her, I was a little starstruck even though sheโ€™s my sister. โ€ฆ But my sister is so down-to-earth and just easy to communicate with, easy to play with, so it came natural.โ€

Bonner played in four games for KSC Szekszรกrd and averaged 13.3 points, 6.3 rebounds and 4.5 assists in just over 30 minutes per game, while McCall averaged 22.9 minutes, 11.2 points and 8.6 rebounds in 17 games. McCall said Bonner calmed her nerves and pushed her to be a better player, while McCall helped speed up Bonnerโ€™s learning curve early on and chauffeured her to and from practice throughout their month together.

Even without being teammates in the WNBA, McCall said that playing in the league like her sister has been โ€œa dream come true.โ€ But at one point, there seemed to be a chance that Bonner and McCall would team up in Connecticut this summer. Bonner is in her second season with the Sun, and McCall was a restricted free agent entering 2021, so the sisters were eyeing Connecticut as a potential landing spot for her before the Mystics ultimately acquired her.

โ€œWhen [the Mystics deal] happened, [DeWanna] was super excited for me,โ€ McCall toldย The Nextย in February. โ€œShe was like, โ€˜Hey, we’re still going to be on the East Coast together. Weโ€™re not that far from each other, so we can still come and visit.โ€™โ€

There may also be a silver lining for McCall of not playing with Bonner in the WNBA: she doesnโ€™t have to change her jersey number. She has always worn Bonnerโ€™s #24 because, as she told High Post Hoops in 2019, โ€œIโ€™ve always wanted to be just like her; I still want to be just like her.โ€ (In Hungary, McCall was the more tenured player, so she kept #24 and Bonner wore #25.)

Both number 24s are off to hot starts this WNBA season. Bonnerโ€”a three-time All-Star and two-time All-WNBA playerโ€”is playing like an MVP candidate for the 5-1 Sun. She ranks ninth in the league in scoring, fifth in 3-point shooting percentage and second in win shares. McCall, meanwhile, is obliterating most of her previous career highs and has started two games for the 2-3 Mystics. She is fourth in the league in rebounding rate (20.1 percent) and ninth in field goal percentage.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CDXp2qiJ0ee

The Sunโ€™s fiery start has only raised the stakes for this game, as the Mystics will likely need their best performance of the season to get McCall the win. Based strictly on their statistics, Bonner would seem to have the upper hand if sheโ€™s matched up with McCall at power forwardโ€”and she also has a slight height advantage at 6โ€™4. But the 6โ€™2 McCall has gotten advice from her dad over the years on how to defend her big sister, and she is confident going into Fridayโ€™s game.

โ€œWhen she gets frustrated, I know what sheโ€™s gonna do: sheโ€™s gonna put her head down to the rim; sheโ€™s gonna try to attack,โ€ McCall said. โ€œโ€ฆ Youโ€™re not going to stop her from scoring. Youโ€™ve just got to contain her as much as possible, so Iโ€™m hoping to get under her skin a little bit, talk a little trash. Hopefully it helps.โ€

McCall, now in her fifth season in the league, has also noticed her mindset about facing Bonner evolve over the years. โ€œIt’s becoming, I guess, a bit more routine,โ€ she said just before the season started. โ€œโ€ฆ At first it was like,ย Oh my gosh, it’s my sister, it’s so amazing, but now I’m like,ย I’m trying to get this win.ย … It’s strictly business. We’ll hug it out afterwards.โ€

Weโ€™ll see on Friday whether that approach pays off for McCall with her second consecutive win against Bonner, or whether Bonner defends home court and her near-perfect record in the family feud.

Brionna and Stephanie Jones, Connecticut Sun

Brionnaโ€™s 2021 statistics (6 games played):ย 13.2 points, 5.8 rebounds and 2.3 assists in 30.5 minutes per game; 52.2 percent shooting from the field

Stephanieโ€™s 2021 statistics (3 games played):ย 4.0 points and 2.3 rebounds in 10.3 minutes per game; 50.0 percent shooting from the field

โ€œKeeping up with the Jonesesโ€ has a whole new meaning in the WNBA this season, as Connecticut is tied for first place in the standings thanks in part to forwards Brionna, Stephanie and Jonquel Jones. (Jonquel is not related to Brionna or Stephanie.) Brionna, who was a candidate for the WNBAโ€™s Most Improved Player last season, is producing at a similar level as she did in 2020, while younger sister Stephanie made a WNBA roster for the first time this season after going undrafted in 2020.

โ€œWhen I got the call that she was coming to training camp, I was so excited for her,โ€ Brionna said at the Sunโ€™s media day. โ€œBeing able to experience that with her, itโ€™s been great for me. I get to help her out, share everything that Iโ€™ve learned so far and just be in her ear all the time.โ€

Stephanie appeared in her first regular-season game on May 14 against Atlanta, scoring four points and grabbing two rebounds in 13 minutes. โ€œIt was a dream come true, really, to be able to be on the court in the league,โ€ she said afterward. โ€œโ€ฆ I was just really excited to be out thereโ€”and not just be out there, but also be out there with my sister.โ€

For a model of how she can develop in the WNBA, Stephanie needs to look no further than Brionna, who averaged fewer than 10 minutes per game in her first three seasons but increased that to over 26 per game over the past two seasons. Her scoring average has roughly quadrupled in that span, and she ranked second in the WNBA last season in field goal percentage at 60.5 percent.

โ€œI can see her growth on the floor, especially being on the court now,โ€ Stephanie said. โ€œItโ€™s really awesome to โ€ฆ play with her and really move with her and see it, [and] just to experience it on the court.โ€

To date, they have shared the court for 10 minutes across two games, to go along with the one season they played together at Maryland. Stephanie said that she learned so much from Brionna in college, ranging from positioning to work ethic to communication. But their games were and remain very different, even though they are just an inch apart in height.

Stephanie is โ€œmore of a face-up post; she has a nice touch for her shot,โ€ Brionna said recently. โ€œSo I think I definitely play more back-to-the-basket, more, you know, I like the contact in the post. She’s more finesse.โ€

Those stylistic differences havenโ€™t stopped Sun head coach Curt Miller from pitting the Joneses against one another in practice, though. Brionna said it happened โ€œpretty much every dayโ€ in training camp and that it sometimes got โ€œa little scrappy,โ€ much like when the sisters would play in the backyard with their two brothers growing up.

โ€œAs soon as we’re on opposite teams, it’s no prisoners,โ€ Brionna said. โ€œโ€ฆ She’s going to come at me just as hard as I’m going to come at her.โ€

With help from teammate Shekinna Stricklen (right), then-Connecticut Sun forward Chiney Ogwumike (left) boxes out her sister, Los Angeles Sparks forward Nneka Ogwumike, during a game on May 24, 2018. (Photo credit: Chris Poss)

Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike, Los Angeles Sparks

Chineyโ€™s 2021 statistics (2 games played):ย 11.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.0 steals in 29.0 minutes per game

Nnekaโ€™s 2021 statistics (2 games played):ย 18.5 points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 27.5 minutes per game; 54.8 percent shooting from the field

In many respects, Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike are the torchbearers for sisters in the WNBA. While they werenโ€™t the first sisters to play in the league, they were the first to both be drafted No. 1 overall, both win Rookie of the Year and be selected to the same All-Star Game. If that somehow isnโ€™t enough, they are also on the Executive Committee of the playersโ€™ union, with Nneka as the WNBPA president and Chiney as one of four vice presidents.

Yet Nneka, the oldest of four Ogwumike sisters who have all played basketball, originally expected to go to medical school rather than play professionally. Chiney is to thank for the change of heart, which came midway through Nnekaโ€™s senior year of college. Nneka recalled, โ€œ[She] said to me, โ€˜Hey, you know, you could be a first-round draft pick in the WNBA.โ€™ I replied, โ€˜I mean, thatโ€™s cool, but we have a game tomorrow.โ€™ โ€ฆ But after my sister got the idea of the WNBA in my head, the headlines became more and more difficult to ignore.โ€

The Ogwumikes played two seasons together at Stanford before being drafted to WNBA teams on opposite sides of the country. Nneka has spent her entire 10-year career with the Los Angeles Sparks, averaging at least 14 points per game in every season and winning a WNBA championship as well as MVP honors in 2016. Chiney, a two-time All-Star, was drafted by Connecticut in 2014 and played there until she requested and received a trade to Los Angeles before the 2019 season.

โ€œThe reason I came to LA is to win a championship with my sister,โ€ Chiney said during training camp this year. But because Chiney opted out of the 2020 season due to injury concerns, 2021 is only the Ogwumikesโ€™ second professional season together.

Chiney has reportedly expanded her game during her time away, in between her work as a television broadcaster and the executive producer of โ€œ144,โ€ a documentary about the 2020 WNBA season. In her first game back, she doubled her previous career high in 3-pointers made in a game with two.

โ€œIโ€™m really excited for the season because I think this is a growth year for me,โ€ she told Sports Illustratedย just before the season started. โ€œGrowth requires growing pains, and I guess thatโ€™s where Iโ€™m at. โ€ฆ At some point if you donโ€™t force your growth, youโ€™re hurting the team.โ€

Between a revamped roster and players like Chiney expanding their games, the Sparks are experiencing a lot of change, which is reflected in their 0-2 start to the season. โ€œIโ€™m even relearning Chiney because I didnโ€™t play with her last year,โ€ Nneka said after the teamโ€™s second loss, which came against the Las Vegas Aces.

As the Ogwumikes vie for a championship and continue to raise the bar for siblings in professional sports, they may also rewrite the narrative around sisterly competition. โ€œThe most annoying question would be, โ€˜Have you guys ever been competitive?โ€™โ€ Chiney said in 2014. โ€œAnd we’re like, โ€˜No,โ€™ and then people are shocked about that. They just don’t know how sisters can get so far without being competitive with each other, because that’s the story they want to hear, but that’s just not our story.โ€

Additional reporting contributed by Jacqueline LeBlanc.

Jenn Hatfield is The IX Basketball's managing editor, Washington Mystics beat reporter and Ivy League beat reporter. She has been a contributor to The IX Basketball since December 2018. Her work has also...

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