Golden State Valkyries' Natalie
Nakase voted WNBA Coach of the Year after reaching playoffs
[September 18, 2025]
By JANIE McCAULEY
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Natalie Nakase won over Golden State
Valkyries owner Joe Lacob with her fire in a matter of two hours
when they sat down last year for a formal interview.
Now, the entire WNBA understands why.
Nakase was voted WNBA Coach of the Year on Wednesday after leading
her team to the playoffs, making league history as the only
first-year franchise to reach the postseason.
The announcement came ahead of Golden State's home game against the
top-seeded Minnesota Lynx. Nakase was recognized by Commissioner
Cathy Engelbert at SAP Center, where the team hosted Game 2 of the
best-of-three series because 18,064-seat capacity Chase Center in
San Francisco was previously booked by the Laver Cup tennis event.
“I never aimed for this type of award, and my dad taught me that
early on, that it's all about winning," Nakase said. “And that's why
I took this job, because Joe was like, 'If you take this job we've
got to win a championship in five years.' That's the goal, so I just
wanted to start with that. But what this does, is it reflects on
(our) whole organization. It starts at the top.”
The 45-year-old Nakase received 53 of 72 votes from sports writers
and broadcasters around the country. She also received AP Coach of
the Year this week.
Golden State's 23 wins were a record for an expansion franchise, and
the Valkyries sold out all 22 of their games at Chase Center.

Nakase recently shared how late father Gary's influence has stayed
with her since his death in 2021, and how she has learned “that I do
need to care about my mental health as well.”
“There have always been moments where I've always wanted to call my
dad," she said before her team's Sept. 4 playoff-clinching win over
the Dallas Wings. "So I am a little bit proud that I've been able to
survive, because normally I tear up, I do cry, I still miss my dad.
But there's moments where I've been able to kind of hang in there
and talk to my dad out loud, where usually I break down. So I'm
starting to really build a thicker skin as I'm going through this
healing process.
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Valkyries head coach Natalie Nakase reacts to a play on the court in
the second half as the Golden State Valkyries played the Minnesota
Lynx in Game 1 of the WNBA first round playoffs at Target Center in
Minneapolis, Minn, on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (Carlos Avila
Gonzalez/San Francisco Chronicle via AP)

"... I wish my dad was here, especially my first
job and being a head coach, and his was part of my dream with him
and a goal.”
Nobody else was close to Nakase for this honor. Atlanta Dream coach
Karl Smesko was runner-up with 15 votes, while Las Vegas Aces coach
Becky Hammon and Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve tied for third.
Lacob, also owner of the NBA's Golden State Warriors, said he
realized Nakase was the right choice from the first time he sat down
with her over brunch in Las Vegas last year during summer league.
Lacob had three finalists at that point, but with Nakase, an
assistant with the Aces, he just knew.
“I knew right then and there, 100%,” Lacob said. “I was sold, done,
deal done. I loved her personality. First of all, I knew about her a
lot because we had known of her for a long time. She was with the
Clippers for 10 years, so we knew we liked her. We were trying to
bring her here many years ago in another capacity on the Warriors
side. ... She's a fireball. I love her story, I love her style, I
love her intensity. She's fantastic."
Nakase credited everyone in the organization — “I wouldn't have
gotten this award if everyone didn't do their job to the best of
their ability, and that's why this award is so important.”
From Day 1, Nakase appreciated how her players believed in her
approach and intense style as a first-year coach and stuck with the
defense-first system.
“The players allow me to cuss at them, to yell at them, to push them
past their limits,” she said. “Again, without them, we wouldn't have
had a winning season and we wouldn't be where I am today now in the
second game of a playoff run.”
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