After a highly anticipated offseason and major rookie signings, the Chicago Sky were supposed to come out swinging — but just a few games into the season, things are looking… shaky.
Between chemistry issues, poor shooting, and glaring defensive lapses, early signs are pointing to trouble in the Windy City. And while it’s way too soon to hit the panic button, fans, analysts, and even players themselves are starting to feel the pressure.
Let’s break down why this is not looking great for the Sky right now.
Offensive Struggles: No Flow, No Rhythm
Even with high-profile additions like Angel Reese and a young, athletic core, the Sky offense is struggling to find its identity.
Low shooting percentages
Poor spacing on the floor
Not enough ball movement
What’s missing? A floor general — someone who can slow things down, get everyone in position, and run the offense. Right now, it’s looking like a group of talented individuals rather than a cohesive unit.
“Too many one-on-one plays. No structure.” — Local analyst via CHI Sports Radio
Angel Reese Can’t Do It Alone
Reese is as advertised: high motor, tough, physical, and confident. But asking her to anchor the offense and defense this early in her rookie season is a lot — maybe too much.
She’s doing her job on the glass, but the lack of consistent support around her is becoming obvious.
💬 “She’s fighting in the paint every possession — where’s the help?” — Fan on X
And the growing frustration? It’s showing. On the court and in postgame interviews.
Defensive Holes You Could Drive a Bus Through
The Sky have given up multiple double-digit leads early this season, often in the second half. Defensive communication is breaking down, and rotations are slow. Opposing teams are feasting in transition and finding wide-open threes far too easily.
Stat check: The Sky are currently in the bottom 3 for opponent field goal percentage.
That’s a recipe for disaster — especially in a league as stacked as the WNBA is right now.
Coaching & Chemistry: Still a Work in Progress
This is a new-look team under a relatively fresh coaching staff, so growing pains are expected. But the Sky need to figure out their roles fast, or this season could spiral before it ever takes off.
Right now, it’s unclear who the leader is on the floor — or in the locker room.
So… What Now?
Tighten the rotation — the Sky need to settle on a consistent starting five and second unit.
Develop structure on both ends — especially in half-court sets and defensive closeouts.
Let Angel Reese be Angel Reese — but don’t put the entire weight of the franchise on her shoulders just yet.
Final Word:
The potential is there — but potential doesn’t win games. Execution does.
The Chicago Sky can still turn this around, but if these issues linger much longer, 2025 could turn into a rebuild year before it even begins.
This is not great for the Sky… and they know it.
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