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Chicago wins first WNBA title

Chicago Sky fans celebrate team’s first WNBA championship

BY MARIAH RUSH

Chicago Sky felt the presence of the city in an 80-74 win over the Phoenix Mercury on Sunday.

CHICAGO • A sold-out crowd of fans at Wintrust Arena erupted in cheers of “We are the Champions,” after the Chicago Sky won their first WNBA championship Sunday.

As confetti and gold streamers rained down, Joanna Karlos, of Chicago, was holding her phone up to not miss a moment of the magic on video.

“This is so great for women’s sports,” she said. “Look at all these people supporting the WNBA!”

The Sky beat the Phoenix Mercury 80-74 in Game 4 to win their first title. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot tweeted that details regarding a rally celebrating the historic win will be released soon.

For many dedicated fans, this championship has been in the works for a while.

Michael Giammanco, a Gold Coast resident, was courtside Sunday afternoon in a flowing, multicolored coat paired with sparkly Doc Martins adorned with flames.

After getting sober 17 years ago, Giammanco said his paychecks now go to Sky tickets, the team’s charity and couture fashion.

“I spend my money on clothes now instead of drugs,” he said. “I go to every game and wear something a little different.”

Giammanco, a season-ticket holder for 11 years, said he used to work with Elton John designing record album covers and worked on a couple of tours as an assistant. That was when his partying began, he said.

After he got sober at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation treatment center in Chicago, he returned to work as a counselor at the same foundation.

“In my recovery I discovered the WNBA and women’s basketball, and I started to come to games,” Giammanco said.

He went to his first game and sat a couple rows back from the court. He decided to start sitting courtside instead. “Once I did that, there was no going back,” he laughed.

For Sunday’s game, Giammanco was joined by his 24-year-old son, Kendall Srubas-giammanco.

Giammanco had a ticket to Tuesday’s Game 5 in Phoenix but he was happy not to have to use it.

Giammanco said women’s basketball players deserve much more recognition, including more pay, for what they do. He arrived early to the game, and got to speak with the Sky players.

“Today I got to say thank you to them, to show my gratitude. It’s such a gift they’re giving the city, and to all of us fans,” he said.

He said a Sky championship means a lot for Chicago.

“This is a basketball city in a lot of ways, but we haven’t been there with the Bulls in so long. And now, to see the Sky this close ... it’s exciting,” he said. “If this happens today, the fan base is just going to shoot up,” he said.

Also courtside, was a family that got tickets to Game 4 thanks to the youngest family member’s talent and love for the game. Johanna Duncan, or as everyone calls her, Jojo, won a contest to appear in an Adidas commercial alongside Sky forward Candace Parker.

One couple was celebrating recently tying the knot at Sunday’s Sky game. Brian Flores Cruz, an Army veteran who recently returned home, and his wife, Cristal, just started watching the Sky this season.

The couple, who grew up in Chicago and now live in Bolingbrook, have known each other since the fifth grade and got married nearly two weeks ago. They were celebrating with their first in-person Sky game.

Decked out in cheese grater heads to support their other Chicago team playing Sunday, the two were ecstatic to be part of the Sky’s journey to a championship.

“This is our home team, this is beautiful,” Brian Cruz said.

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2021-10-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://daily.gazette.com/article/282063395160175

The Gazette, Colorado Springs