Aces put on show in opener — even without Liz Cambage

Jackie Young hits a turnaround floater for the bucket and the foul to notch her first score as a WNBA player. (0:20)

LAS VEGAS — Coach Bill Laimbeer refers to this desert oasis as a “big small town.” As in, Las Vegas is a large enough metro area to support the WNBA’s Aces well, but not so huge that they’re lost in the landscape. This is a place, Laimbeer said, where someone like Liz Cambage can stand out — and not just because she’s 6-foot-8. But because she has star quality that extends beyond how good her game is.

Yet as excited as Las Vegas Aces fans are about getting the Australian center — who came via trade with Dallas earlier this month — their team showed them plenty in Sunday’s season opener even without her. The Aces won 83-70 over the Los Angeles Sparks, getting 21 points and 11 rebounds from A’ja Wilson, last season’s rookie of the year. Cambage, who is dealing with Achilles’ tendinitis, did not play, sporting a black suit and a look of concentration during the game as she studied her new teammates and provided encouragement.

She seems happy to be here, even if the offseason saga of where — or even if — she would play this season was draining. She’s joining a team that doesn’t need her to come in and do everything but will give her an opportunity to be a difference-maker.

Wilson, one of three overall No. 1 draft picks on the roster along with Kelsey Plum (2017) and Jackie Young (2019), started Sunday where she left off as a rookie, as one of the most talented players on the floor. But guard Kayla McBride (20 points, seven rebounds) and forward Dearica Hamby (12 points, 14 rebounds) also shined for the Aces. Hamby, in her fifth season, came off the bench to give Las Vegas a lift, which is her specialty.

Las Vegas led throughout the game, and firmly took control by holding the Sparks to eight points in the second quarter. Los Angeles was without veteran forward Candace Parker, who has a hamstring injury. The Sparks have been known for their defense in recent years, but there were glitches in a different system under new coach Derek Fisher.

“It’s going to take some time, but we have to be patient,” Sparks guard Alana Beard said.

Sunday was the first time the Ogwumike sisters, Nneka and Chiney, have played together in the WNBA, with Chiney coming to Los Angeles in a trade from Connecticut. Nneka had 17 points and 11 rebounds. Chiney had a Sparks debut she’d probably like to forget, going 1-of-10 from the field and finishing with two points.

Maria Vadeeva, a Russian post player in her second season in the league, led Los Angeles with 24 points. It’s uncertain how long they’ll be without Parker, but they missed her despite the amount of talent they do have.

Young had a solid debut for the Aces, starting and going 4-for-4 from the field for eight points. Plum had 11 points and a team-high six assists. It was the kind of game that has to whet the appetite of Aces fans; if they played this well without Cambage, just wait until she’s on the floor.

Laimbeer is frank — and he’s correct — in saying that Tulsa was the worst place Cambage could have ended up when she was drafted into the WNBA at No. 2 in 2011. The franchise had just moved from Detroit, had someone in Nolan Richardson who’d never coached the women’s game before, and too much was expected from the 19-year-old Cambage with a franchise that didn’t have enough talent or strong direction.

Even though it has been a long road for her to get here, Laimbeer says he thinks it’s the right fit. The anticipation will build for when she gets to take the court for the Aces. But Sunday’s victory was a good indication that Vegas is good — and will soon get even better.

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