Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen raises her right hand and points up ahead of her. She is alone in the frame, and her mouth is slightly open, like she might be saying something.
Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen (33) points down the court during a game against the Phoenix Mercury at CareFirst Arena in Washington, D.C., on July 27, 2025. (Photo credit: Domenic Allegra | The Next)

WASHINGTON โ€” Lucy Olsen has a slogan: โ€œBasketball is fun.โ€ Itโ€™s helped her excel at Villanova and Iowa and stick with the Washington Mystics as a second-round draft pick.

Next, Olsen will take that slogan global. She recently signed with the Townsville Fire in Australiaโ€™s WNBL for the 2025-26 season. Sheโ€™ll head there shortly after the Mysticsโ€™ season ends to try to build on her WNBA experience โ€” and perhaps win a WNBL championship.

โ€œI’m stoked she’s coming over to the WNBL,โ€ Mystics guard and Australia native Jade Melbourne told The Next on Sunday. โ€œโ€ฆ I’m biased, but I think it’s one of the best leagues in the world under [the WNBA], and I’m excited. Her game style is going to suit the system really well โ€ฆ in Townsville.โ€

Olsen, a 5โ€™10 guard, was drafted 23rd overall by the Mystics in April, and she became the first second-round pick to make a Mystics roster out of training camp since Myisha Hines-Allen in 2018. But she has played mostly off the ball despite playing point guard in college, and her minutes have been inconsistent. She played 37:31 in a game when two other guards were out with injuries, but she didnโ€™t play at all in three other games. Partly as a result, sheโ€™s gone scoreless in six games sheโ€™s played in, but sheโ€™s also scored 14 or more points twice.

On the season, she is averaging 3.5 points, 1.0 rebounds and 1.0 assists in 10.7 minutes per game. She is making 47.2% of her 2-pointers and 37.9% of her 3-pointers.

Olsenโ€™s teammates and coaches have praised her for staying ready, getting extra work in and continuing to support her teammates as her minutes have fluctuated. Veteran guard Brittney Sykes has even referred to her as โ€œPPP,โ€ which stands for points per possession, because of how she can score in a hurry. Olsen is particularly known for her midrange game, but sheโ€™s also shooting better from 3-point range than she did in college.

โ€œHer midrange is one of the coolest things I’ve seen about her game,โ€ Melbourne said. โ€œThe way she can just get up and release it from the top of her head, it’s really unique.โ€

Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen is shown from the side, shooting an open midrange jump shot. The ball has just come off her fingertips, and no one has a hand up to contest the shot.
Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen (33) shoots a jump shot in a game against the Minnesota Lynx at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minn., on July 3, 2025. (Photo credit: John McClellan | The Next)

Olsen is taking only about 2.2 shots per game from the midrange or behind the arc, but her shooting is important to Mystics head coach Sydney Johnson because it can pull defenses away from the paint. Washington has relied heavily on paint touches this season, taking a league-high 58% of its shots from there.

โ€œWe can’t live off of just points in the paint,โ€ Johnson told reporters after Olsen scored a career-high 19 points in 17 minutes against the Minnesota Lynx on July 3. โ€œSo โ€ฆ it’s a real shot in the arm for us when she comes out and plays like she did today.โ€

As the season has progressed, Olsen has settled into her role, and her confidence has shown. Early in the season, she told The Next, she would get so excited to check in that sheโ€™d be sped up on the court. Now, sheโ€™s found a better pace and adjusted to the WNBAโ€™s physicality.

โ€œMy mind is working faster than it was when I first got here,โ€ Olsen said on Saturday. โ€œI think there’s been a lot of improvements, and I’m just hoping to learn more and keep improving.โ€

โ€œShe comes out and just has that confidence,โ€ veteran center Stefanie Dolson told The Next on Saturday. โ€œAnd that’s all you ask from the rookies, really, is come in and don’t be scared, because a lot of vets can tell when rookies are scared, and she’s one of the ones that isn’t. She’s talented, plays really hard and kind of executes everything.โ€

For Johnson, what stands out is that Olsen hasnโ€™t let her limited role shake her confidence in what she can be as a professional player.

โ€œThere may be more [in her] than just what we need,โ€ he said on June 28. โ€œAnd โ€ฆ her balance of bringing what the team needs but [having] an inner confidence in her own abilities, that’s not an easy thing to do, and she has held strong to that.โ€

In Australia, Olsen should get to show more of her game than she has in Washington, particularly her point guard skills. Several European teams expressed interest in her, according to her agent, Orlando Castaรฑo Jr., but she was hesitant to play a long overseas season following her college and WNBA seasons. The WNBL season is shorter: The 2025-26 regular season runs from mid-October to early February, with teams playing one to two games per week. That schedule will give her more rest, and it means that she wonโ€™t report late for WNBA training camp in 2026, which was also important to her.

โ€œEuroLeague is just long, so I wasn’t ready for that yet,โ€ Olsen said. โ€œBut Australia was just the best of both worlds, and luckily it worked out.โ€

โ€œ[The WNBL is] a really good league. It’s really competitive, but it’s really short,โ€ Mystics guard Sug Sutton, an American who played for the Fire in 2021-22, told The Next on Sunday. โ€œSo you don’t have to be there for a long period of time, especially if you’re first starting your overseas career, because sometimes that can be overwhelming. โ€ฆ It’s not a heavy load on your body. And I think that’s a good thing, and I think that’s gonna be a benefit for Lucy.โ€

Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen dribbles the ball with her left hand on the perimeter. Her eyes are up, trying to shed one Phoenix Mercury defender who's grabbing at Olsen's stomach as she chases her and keeping the ball away from another defender who's sliding over to help.
Washington Mystics guard Lucy Olsen (33) handles the ball on the perimeter during a game against the Phoenix Mercury at CareFirst Arena in Washington, D.C., on July 27, 2025. (Photo credit: Domenic Allegra | The Next)

Before Olsen signed, she spoke with Townsville head coach Shannon Seebohm over the phone. She said they had a good rapport right away and described him as โ€œsuper intense but also fun.โ€ Melbourne and Sutton likewise spoke highly of Seebohm and the player development Olsen will get with Townsville.

โ€œA lot of people that go play for Shannon come out of the season a better player,โ€ Melbourne said. โ€œAnd I think Lucy being a young player, [she] wants to keep improving. She’s a basketball junkie. So is Shannon. โ€ฆ

โ€œShe’ll have access to the court whenever she wants, and I think that’s really going to suit her, because we all know Lucy loves to live in the gym. So I think she’ll find it really, really good up there. And I think the teammates and the pieces she’s got around her will really bring out the best in her.โ€

Last season, the Fire finished third in the WNBL in the regular season and runners-up in the playoffs. Their roster included former top-five WNBA draft picks Nia Coffey and Lauren Cox.

Both Melbourne and Sutton described Townsville as a place where people are passionate about and show up for womenโ€™s basketball. Last season, the Fire had the highest average attendance in the WNBL and five of the 10 largest single-game attendances.

For Olsen, there was also the appeal of going to Australia โ€” a place on her bucket list, along with Japan and somewhere she can see the northern lights. As a bonus, the WNBL takes place during Australiaโ€™s summer, and Townsville has beaches โ€œeverywhere,โ€ Sutton said.

All of that seemingly adds up to a place where basketball can keep being fun for Olsen and she can keep improving as a lead guard and an all-around player.

โ€œAustralia just seems like a great place,โ€ Olsen said. โ€œโ€ฆ [Itโ€™s] somewhere I’ve always wanted to go anyway, so basketball bringing me there is the best-case scenario.โ€


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.


Monumental Sports and Entertainment, the group that owns the Washington Mystics, holds a minority stake in The Next. The Nextโ€™s editorial operations are entirely independent of Monumental and all other business partners.

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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