
Paige Bueckers shyly unmove a gift from the mayor of Dallas, Eric Johnson, and the city administrator Kimberly Bizor Tolbert on Monday afternoon before revealing his own 10 gallons hat.
He put it in the head, at the beginning before being corrected, for a photo with the other four 2025 wings recruits that received the same cowboy hats.
Welcome to Dallas, Paige.
Monday was another of what General Manager Curt Miller is calling “moments of impulse construction” in this new and refreshing was from the wings of Dallas.
For years, Dallas Haas’s leg needs an urgency of a systemic review. It has been a place that Marquesina’s free agents have largely ignored and several of the league stars, including Skylar Diggins-Smith, Liz Cambage, Allisha Gray and, more recently, Satou Sabally has forced her step.
However, hope is that those days of being a last -moment idea have ended.
The transition to relevance began in November, with the hiring of Miller, and has quickly accelerated with the wings winning the number 1 team in the WNBA lottery.
Despite the reports that Bueckers can refuse to play in Dallas, Miller said he never had a doubt that former Uconnar would be on his team this season.
Bueckers and those around her made it clear that she wanted to concentrate on winning a national championship last season with the huskies and would not interweave conversations about her WNBA future.
“We respect that, we respect the process and we were patients along the way,” said Miller. “And we knew that everything was in a positive trend and we appreciated that there was that respect from one side to another.”
Bueckers had a letter, but the reassuring conversations with the wings before listening to their name as the number 1 selection in the draft last week.
She felt excited to learn about the new director and future franchise plans.
“They only seem to be a big organization and be a winning organization,” Bueckers said. “They continue to build each other, continuous to develop the impulse of women’s sports and the created wave.”
The wings currently play and practice at the College Park Center, the local sand of the University of Texas in Arlington. But the team has plans to move to the Dallas center next year. After the movement, the Wings will play games in a recently renewed sand in the city’s convention center. They also plan to open an avant -garde performance installation, with a value of at least $ 54 million.
With facilities updates on the horizon and a low productive season, wings not only have optimism but impulse for the future.
University Parks Center. NBAE through Getty Images
For this season, Miller has built a list that combines veterans established as Arike Ogunbowale, Dijonai Carrington, Tyasha Harris and Nalysa Smith with newbies, including Bueckers, Asiaha James and Madison Scott.
“I can’t wait to support the coaching staff on the style of play that will bring Dallas … the exciting belief that is so restless now in the locker room,” said Miller. “So really excited this year of Foundation, and when we say that the base there are no limits in what this group can do. But we understand that there are many new pieces that are together and will take time to combine and deceive Gogether.”
Advancing, Bueckers is undoubtedly the cornerstone of the wings. Her charisma and talent made her a beloved icon in Uconn. It seems destined to the status of superstar now in the WNBA.
Keeping it happy and building around it will be key for wings to succeed with the reconstruction of the franchise.
Dallas did many good things from this party to roll the ball. But only time will say if Miller’s vision will be realized.
“We are trying to create a first player environment and attract future players to want to come and stay in Dallas,” said Miller. “And through free agency, through trades, we have achieved many of our goals by bringing great and great players, but most importantly, great players who are not to people around the Windet of the League.”
Bueckers also wants the same for wings.
“I am not really huge in the metric, but only in the people, the culture … Dallas becoming a place where everyone wants to play and everyone who is here wants to stay,” Bueckers said when they were asked what a score could be for the success of the team this season. “So just build a base of really enjoying being close to each other, enjoying playing together, enjoying being together outside the court, on the court, in all aspects.”


