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Angel Reese is about to break a rebounding record, and she dressed the part

Reese sported a Dennis Rodman jersey ahead of Friday’s game between the Chicago Sky and Indiana Fever.

Washington Mystics v Chicago Sky
Washington Mystics v Chicago Sky
Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images
Noa Dalzell is a senior writer covering the WNBA and all of women’s basketball for Breakaway, SB Nation’s women’s sports vertical, as well as the Celtics for CelticsBlog.

Angel Reese is on pace to have the greatest rebounding season of all time — and she’s dressing like it. Ahead of Friday night’s Chicago Sky game against the Indiana Fever, Reese — who is on the brink of setting a new rebounding record — fittingly arrived in a #10 Dennis Rodman jersey.

Reese could become the new record-holder for most rebounds in a single season tonight. Sylvia Fowles currently has the all-time record — 404 rebounds in the 2018 season — but Reese is just 16 rebounds away. She’s grabbed 388 rebounds in 30 games this season.

Given that Reese averaged 19 rebounds across her last four games, becoming the all-time leading rebounder tonight — against Caitlin Clark and the Fever — is something that is within reach.

Regardless of whether it happens on Friday, Angel Reese is poised to set a new record, and she’ll do so by a landslide. If she were to continue rebounding at her current 12.9 rebounds per game average, she’d finish the year with 517 rebounds for the season — 113 more than Fowles’s record.

Needless to say, Reese is the league’s leading rebounder this season, and two-time MVP A’ja Wilson is second with 11.7 rebounds per game. She’s currently in a battle with Caitlin Clark for Rookie of the Year — Clark has the edge for most counting stats (and wins), but Reese has had better defensive numbers and has been a historically good rebounding. ESPN has Reese ranked No. 1 in their latest rankings.

The decision to wear a Dennis Rodman jersey ahead of such a big game is a fitting one. Rodman is widely considered one of the great rebounders in the history of the sport — he averaged 13.1 rebounds throughout his 14-year professional career, good for the 11th highest career average in NBA history.

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