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Three mid-major stars who could hear their name called at the 2026 WNBA Draft

April 12, 2026
Three mid-major stars who could hear their name called at the 2026 WNBA Draft

PHOENIX — Mia Nicastro looked around the court at Grand Canyon University’s Global Credit Union Arena on April 4 and found herself surrounded by stars from the Power 4 conferences. There was North Carolina’s Nyla Harris, LSU’s Amiya Joyner and Baylor’s Darianna Littlepage-Buggs.

USA TODAY Sports

In the stands of the Women’s College All-Star Game, scattered amongst fans, were scouts and coaches from WNBA teams. This game, played each of the last three years on the day between the Final Four and national championship in the host city, serves as one last showcase for players hoping to get picked in the WNBA draft.

Nicastro didn’t need to score in bunches to wow professional decision-makers. There’s plenty of film of her doing that at Western Illinois, where she was fourth in the nation in scoring this past season at 24.1 points per game. She had something else to prove.

“I hope I showed that I move well without the ball and I’m versatile. I can do a lot of things, I can play a lot of different positions and I play hard,” Nicastro told USA TODAY Sports. “I think there is something to be said about being able to play well in a system and being able to play team basketball. And I think I do that well.”

A 6-foot-2 guard from St. Charles, Missouri, Nicastro is one of a handful of mid-major players who hope to have their name called on Monday night during the WNBA draft.

Last season, two mid-major players were drafted. Both Gonzaga’s Yvonne Ejim and Harvard’s Harmoni Turner were selected in the third round, but neither of them played in the WNBA. Indeed, in recent history, it’s been difficult for mid-major players to get drafted and stick around in the league.

<p style=With the Women's Final Four complete, all eyes turn towards the 2026 WNBA Draft. The WNBA draft takes place Monday, April 13, in New York, and this year's event has a different feel. Unlike the last two drafts, where Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers were consensus No. 1 overall picks, this year's top spot is up for grabs. After an exciting March Madness, it's time to see who helped their stock and who fell down the draft board. Is Awa Fam still at the top? Is Azzi Fudd a top-five draft pick? Who vaulted into the first round?

Here's USA TODAY's latest 2026 WNBA mock draft: 1. Dallas Wings: Lauren Betts, C, UCLA
- After a stellar NCAA Tournament run, Betts has done enough to earn consideration for the No. 1 overall pick. While the Bruins center will need to work on shooting more baskets in the mid-range and later from deep, she can be inserted into Dallas's lineup when the season starts on May 8. Her length and size make her an immediate threat in the post, along with her passing abilities and rebounding prowess.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=2. Minnesota Lynx: Olivia Miles, G, TCU
- Minnesota doesn't struggle to move the ball, but adding Miles into the mix gives the Lynx the ability to take their offensive movement up a level. The TCU guard has a high basketball IQ, which should help her with the rookie learning curve on a team with championship aspirations. Head coach Cheryl Reeve can also bring out the best in Miles defensive skills as she adjusts to WNBA play.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=3. Seattle Storm: Azzi Fudd, G, UConn
- Fudd had a very underwhelming NCAA Tournament aside from her second round game against Syracuse. The slump won't stop her from being drafted. The UConn guard's shot is still the purest in college basketball, and her ability to be an offensive threat at any moment is something you don't see as often at the rookie level. Fudd also rarely wastes a movement or a shot, making her a prime candidate to draft.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=5. Chicago Sky: Kiki Rice, G, UCLA
- Until veteran Courtney Vandersloot returns, the Sky need a guard who can facilitate, score when needed and defend. Rice, who finished a career year in a UCLA uniform, has proven she can do it all. The senior guard has improved her ability to read opposing defenses, maintain patience with solid footwork and recover in help defense. Rice would also take some pressure off Hailey Van Lith, who struggled during her rookie season.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=6. Toronto Tempo: Flau'jae Johnson, G, LSU
- Johnson has a score-first mentality, and she does it in a variety of ways: midrange, downhill in the paint and from the 3-point line. She's one of the top defensive guards in the 2026 class, and if she can improve her defensive awareness at the pro level, she can become an elite two-way guard. Head coach Sandy Brondello should also be a tremendous asset to Johnson's growth.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=7. Portland Fire: Ta'Niya Latson, G, South Carolina
- Latson's NCAA Tournament run was a mixed bag. That shouldn't hurt her WNBA draft stock, but it wasn't hard to notice as the level of competition rose (with games against TCU, UConn and UCLA), she struggled to find her shot or ways to contribute. At the pro level, she'll be asked to do more, and she'll need to lean into her aggressiveness to have success.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=8. Golden State Valkyries: Gabriela Jaquez, G, UCLA
- If a team gives her any space, Jaquez will make them pay. The guard can do it all, with assists, 3-pointers, in the paint, on the boards or by creating a steal. She should fit well within Golden State's "hard hat and lunch pail" culture, where they pride themselves on having energy on both sides of the ball.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=9. Washington Mystics: Raven Johnson, G South Carolina
- While Johnson has proven she can score when needed, it's her facilitation skills and defense that will make her a top 10 pick. The South Carolina guard does a great job of feeding her bigs and spreading the offense out to find the best shot. She is also a lockdown defender who leaves little room for error and isn't afraid of anyone on a court, regardless of size.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=10. Indiana Fever: Gianna Kneepkens, G, UCLA
- Kneepkens ended her college career shooting nearly 50-40-90, which is impressive and rare in today's college landscape. The UCLA guard's game isn't flashy, but it's often timely. Kneepkens knows how to step into the big moments, as she did in the national championship when she delivered two massive 3-point baskets during an extended Bruins' run.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=13. Atlanta Dream: Madina Okot, C, South Carolina
- Atlanta needs depth. Adding Okot would help the Dream with their post presence and perimeter shooting. The South Carolina big can score from multiple levels and will crash the glass. If Atlanta brings veteran center Brittney Griner back, Okot would learn from one of the best in league history at the position.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=14. Seattle Storm: Marta Suarez, F, TCU
- Suarez's NCAA Tournament run wasn't great, but she did have a breakout game against Virginia during the Sweet 16, which included a career high 33 points plus 10 rebounds. The outing was a glimpse of Suarez at her best, which could entice Seattle to add Suarez as depth now and starter later.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=15. Connecticut Sun: Cotie McMahon, F, Ole Miss
- McMahon would work well in a young core of players like Saniya Rivers, Leila Lacan, Aaliyah Edwards and Aneesah Morrow. The Ole Miss forward is a utility piece that the Sun could utilize to its advantage. She does most of her damage in the paint ― Connecticut's specialty ― and could also help facilitate, if needed. Once McMahon gets crisper as a defender, she'll be dynamite at the next level.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Our WNBA mock draft could be full of future stars

With the Women's Final Four complete, all eyes turn towards the 2026 WNBA Draft. The WNBA draft takes place Monday, April 13, in New York, and this year's event has a different feel. Unlike the last two drafts, where Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers were consensus No. 1 overall picks, this year's top spot is up for grabs. After an exciting March Madness, it's time to see who helped their stock and who fell down the draft board. Is Awa Fam still at the top? Is Azzi Fudd a top-five draft pick? Who vaulted into the first round?Here's USA TODAY's latest 2026 WNBA mock draft:1. Dallas Wings: Lauren Betts, C, UCLA- After a stellar NCAA Tournament run, Betts has done enough to earn consideration for the No. 1 overall pick. While the Bruins center will need to work on shooting more baskets in the mid-range and later from deep, she can be inserted into Dallas's lineup when the season starts on May 8. Her length and size make her an immediate threat in the post, along with her passing abilities and rebounding prowess.

Since 2016, when George Washington’s Jonquel Jones and USF’s Courtney Williams were both first-round picks, three mid-major products have been selected in the first round: Princeton’s Bella Alarie and USF’s Kitija Laksa in 2020 and Florida Gulf Coast’s Kierstan Bell in 2022. Of the three, only Bell is still playing for the team that drafted her, the Las Vegas Aces. Alarie lasted two seasons with the Dallas Wings and Laksa didn’t make her WNBA debut until last season with the Phoenix Mercury. Laksa was recently selected by the Toronto Tempo in the expansion draft.

But this year, with Toronto and the Portland Fire starting up, there’s more teams, picks and roster spots than before, increasing the chances of mid-major hopefuls getting selected and finding long-term homes in the WNBA.

In Monday’s draft, there are three players from the mid-major level that have a decent chance of having their names called: Nicastro from Western Illinois, Brooklyn Meyer of South Dakota State and Richmond’s Maggie Doogan.

Of the three, itseems likely that Doogan will go the highest. A 6-foot-2 forward, Doogan powered Richmond to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and this season was the highest single-game scorer, pouring in48 points in a triple-overtime win in January. Doogan averaged 21.1 points, 7.9 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game this season while shooting 50.6% from the floor, 40.4% from 3-point land and 89.1% from the free throw line — just shy of a coveted 50-40-90 season.

When Doogan scored 26 points on 10-of-14 shooting to go along with six rebounds in a Feb. 14 win at Davidson, representatives from the Tempo, Atlanta Dream and Wings were in the building.

Former Richmond coach Aaron Roussell — who washired as Virginia’s new head coachlast week — has fielded dozens of calls from WNBA folks this season.

“I've probably left just about every conversation I've had with seemingly every WNBA franchise of, ‘Yep, she is that, but guess what? In three years, that kid is going to be in the gym probably more than anybody else,’” Roussell said after Richmond’s NCAA Tournament loss to Nebraska. “She's going to consume the game of basketball more than anybody else.

“She can make an impact right away, but what I'm really excited about is what Maggie Doogan is going to be on the professional stage over the next two to five years and beyond. I know how special she is.”

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Nicastro and Meyer were the only mid-major players — out of a total of 20 — that played in this year’s college all-star game.

“Obviously, only 20 girls in the country got to be here, so I'm just really grateful that I was considered,” Nicastro said. “Coming from a mid-major, I think it's a little bit harder to get that exposure and get your name out there.”

In addition to some of her eye-popping scoring totals, Nicastro also grabbed 9.8 rebounds per game and ranked eighth nationally in player efficiency rating.

Each year, the basketball analytics and statistics website Her Hoop Stats gives out the Becky Hammon Award to the best mid-major player of the year. Before she coached the Aces to three WNBA titles, Hammon was an All-American at Colorado State and led the Rams to three NCAA Tournament appearances.

This year, that award went to South Dakota State’s Meyer, who averaged 22.6 points, 8.1 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game. She was third in the nation in field goal percentage with a mark of 64.6% from the floor.

“I feel like what I pride myself in is just playing hard,” Meyer told USA TODAY Sports. “I know I'm a little undersized, but I'm willing to get in there and do what I have to do.”

While some mid-major players have transferred to Power 4 programs ahead of their senior seasons to boost their draft stocks — something that worked for Kaitlyn Chen, who went from Princeton to UConn before being selected by the Golden State Valkyries in the third round last season — Meyer played her entire career with the Jackrabbits. South Dakota State went to the NCAA Tournament in each of Meyer’s four seasons.

“I'm just so glad that I stayed there all four years. It's been so rewarding,” Meyer said. “I have such great coaches and great teammates around me that make it really easy to show up every day and get to work.”

In this year’s March Madness, South Dakota State faced off against Washington in the first round. For Huskies coach Tina Langley, there was only one player at the top of the scouting report.

“If you do a statistical analysis, she's actually in some systems paired with (UCLA center) Lauren Betts and her efficiency,” Langley said. “So, she's incredibly talented.”

With expansion teams coming online, this year’s WNBA Draft will have 45 picks — the most since 2002 when it was four rounds long.

For Nicastro, hearing her name called would be a dream come true, but she’s also being realistic.

“It would just be a testament to a lot of hard work. It's something that I've dreamed of since I was a kid. It's kind of surreal, you know? It's actually here and I'm being considered,” Nicastro said. “If it doesn't work out, I'm a big believer in everything happens the way it's supposed to. So, I’ll go overseas, see what happens, have a good year and try again.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Three mid-major college stars who could be picked in 2026 WNBA Draft

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Authorities seize 5 tons of cocaine from banana, wine shipments

April 12, 2026
Authorities seize 5 tons of cocaine from banana, wine shipments

Border agents in the United Kingdom have seized about five tons of cocaine at a single port in just under a month, the country's Home Officesaid on social media.

CBS News

The drugs are estimated to be worth over £400 million, or about $538 million, the agency said.

The drugs were seized atLondon Gateway, a deep-sea container port about 30 miles from London. It is the second-largest port in England and handles large container ships.

The Home Office said "criminal gangs attempted to evade detection" by hiding drugs in other cargo, including inside a banana shipment and on a vat of South American wine. Photos show the drugs inside cargo containers and inside shipments, as well as spread out on a building floor.

The Home Office did not say if any arrests have been made as part of the seizures.

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It's not the first major bust at a London port in recent weeks. Three men were charged after allegedly attempting to smuggle nearly $100 million worth of cocaine through England's Southampton Docks in March. The three men, who were all arrested and will next appear in court on April 17, hid the drugs in a banana shipment.

In February 2024, another Southampton Docks banana shipment was found to be holdingmore than 12,500 pounds of cocaine. At the time, it was the country's largest recorded single seizure of illicit drugs.

Authorities around the world have found drugs smuggled inside banana shipments. Greek policeseized nearly 600 poundsof cocaine inside a banana shipment in August 2025. In July, Russia said it seized 1,800 pounds of cocaine hidden under bananas, and in May, authorities in Norwayfound over 320 pounds of cocaineinside a banana shipment after workers at a fruit distributor in Norway found a packet of the illicit drugs.

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Russian strikes on Odesa kill 2 ahead of Orthodox Easter ceasefire

April 12, 2026
Russian strikes on Odesa kill 2 ahead of Orthodox Easter ceasefire

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian drone strikes killed at least two people in the Ukrainian city of Odesa overnight into Saturday, local authorities reported, ahead of aproposed ceasefirefor Orthodox Easter.

Associated Press A rescue worker walks in front of residential building which was heavily damaged after a Russian strike in Odesa, Ukraine, Monday, April 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Michael Shtekel) El presidente ruso Vladímir Putin escucha al viceprimer ministro y jefe del Gabinete del Gobierno, Dmitry Grigorenko, durante su reunión en el Kremlin, en Moscú, el jueves 9 de abril de 2026. (Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik, foto del Kremlin vía AP)

Russia Ukraine War

A further two people were wounded in the attack on the Black Sea port city, when drones hit a residential area, damaging apartment buildings, houses and a kindergarten.

According to the Ukrainian Air Force, Russia targeted Ukraine with 160 drones overnight, of which 133 were shot down or intercepted, hours before a proposed Easter ceasefire was due to come into force.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said 99 Ukrainian drones were shot down overnight across Russia and occupied Crimea.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday declared a 32-hour ceasefire over the Orthodox Easter weekend, ordering Russian forces to halt hostilities from 4 p.m. Saturday until the end of Sunday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday Ukraine is ready to mirror any ceasefire steps, having earlier proposed to Russia apause in attackson each other’senergy infrastructureover the Orthodox Easter holiday.

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Previous ceasefire attempts have had little impact, with both sides accusing each other of violations.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Friday described Putin’s move as a “humanitarian” gesture, but said Moscow remains focused on a comprehensive settlement based on its longstanding demands — a key sticking point that has prevented the two sides from reaching an agreement.

A possible prisoner exchange over the Easter holiday has also been discussed.

Russia’s human rights ombudswoman Tatyana Moskalkova said last week that both sides were working on exchanges of prisoners.

Periodic prisoner exchanges have been one of the few positive outcomes of otherwise fruitless monthslongU.S.-brokered negotiationsbetween Moscow and Kyiv. The talks have delivered no progress on key issues preventing an end toRussia’s invasionof its neighbor, now in its fifth year.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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51 Rare And Fascinating Historic Photos That Let You Experience Life In A Different Era

April 12, 2026
51 Rare And Fascinating Historic Photos That Let You Experience Life In A Different Era

They say history is usually written by the winners. While that may be true, evidence is evidence, and if it holds up, we can’t ignore it.

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This time, we’re talking about those grainy, mostly black-and-white,historicalphotos that captured everyday life and littledetailsthat textbooks might skip.

Onr/HistoryDefined, people share and discover these fascinating slices of thepast, and we’ve collected some of the best ones for you.

You’ll see a six-year-old paperboy doing his rounds in the early 1900s, Otto Frank revisiting the attic where hisfamilyhid for years, and even the frozen Niagara Falls.

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It wasn’t until the early 19th century that photography actually came into being. The first permanent photograph was made in 1826 or 1827 by theFrenchinventor Nicéphore Niépce.

It was a black‑and‑white image of the view outside his window at Le Gras and took hours of exposure to record.

In 1839, Louis‑Jacques Daguerre publicly introduced the daguerreotype, a much more practical photography process. It used a polished silver plate and required much shorter exposure times.

This moment is often marked as the birth of photography as a usable, widespread medium.

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In the earliest days of photography, people didn’t point their cameras at anything and everything as we do now.

The gear was huge, heavy, slow, and way awkward to use, so photographers mostly set up on stuff that wouldn’t move, such as landscapes, big buildings, old ruins, and monuments.

Scientists, explorers, governments, or rich travelers actually wanted these pictures asrecordsof far‑off places or fancy architectural details.

Once the technology got better and the exposure times dropped, portrait photos became all the rage.

All of a sudden, anyone — not just kings or fancy people with painted portraits — could get a snapshot of themselves. That’s when photography really spread outside the elite circles into everyday life.

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By the 1800s, the camera started being used as a real documentary tool.

Photographers began using it to capture major events, streets and neighborhoods, factories, and even wars.

By the late 19th century, there were photos of battlefields and of cities changing from farms into industrial hubs. They were evidence of how life actually was.

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Because photography was automatic and mechanical, a lot ofpeoplebelieved that images were an honest record of what was there and not someone’s interpretation of it, as in paintings or written records.

Photographs were even used in court as legal evidence for a long time. Judges treated them as direct imprints of reality, something more trustworthy than a person’s memory or a sketch.

Researchshows that we have long had a tendency to believe that photos show real moments exactly as they happened.

Since a photograph is made by capturing real light through a lens, many people assume it carries information that wasn’t put there on purpose by someone.

That made our ancestors see photos as straightforward portrayals of life, even though the photographer still chose the scene, angle, and moment.

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There was an innocent time before digital editing when changing a photo wasn’t as easy or quick.

For example, the picture showing afamilyarriving at Ellis Island to start a new life in America in 1910 shows us real faces and emotions from that exact second, untouched by today’s instant manipulations.

Today, anyone with a keyboard can generate or alter images using AI and deepfake tech that look totally real.

Just recently, some politicians shared an AI‑generatedimageof a US airman’s rescue from Iran that never actually happened, before admitting it was fake after it spread online.

It’s harder than ever to know what’s real, simply from looking at a photo. So these historic images are extra precious because they carry a kind of authenticity we don’t always get anymore.

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These historic images also help us visualize how different the world was back then.

An image of an 18‑year‑old woman taking care of her two kids at herfamily’s farm is a visual time capsule showing what everyday life was really like. You see the clothes they wore and the expressions on their faces. You can even see the way the space and objects are arranged.

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Or the picture of a milk deliveryman from the 1950s instantly tells us how milkmen were everyday fixtures in many neighborhoods. They pulled up to people’s doorsteps with fresh milk bottles on a horse‑drawn cart or an early delivery truck.

Seeing that makes us think about how ordinary errands and food routines have changed drastically. Now, most of us grab groceries ourselves from a store or through a delivery app in a few taps.

“Visual media often seem more accessible to our students than the written record. Students themselves mention that images make the past seem more accessible, giving concrete shape to a world that sometimes seems intangible,”saysAnna Pegler-Gordon, assistant professor ofhistoryat the James Madison College of Michigan State University.

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War photos carry their own kind of gravity. For example, the picture of a Serbian soldier sleeping next to his father on the front lines helps us connect the past to our own sense of reality today.

It makes us think about what those people were really going through in that moment.

The emotional impact is whyexpertssay that photos build collective memory. They help us remember events both socially and personally.

“People appreciate the immediacy of the image, which often conveys information more quickly than a primary document written in an unfamiliar, or even a foreign, language,”saysGordon.

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The best part about these historic pics is that they’re nuggets ofdaily life, community culture, traditions, and ordinary moments that otherwise might be forgotten. It’s not just famous faces or significant events.

Every day photos act like a time machine, letting us see different things like how people dressed, worked, laughed, or struggled long before we were born.

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