The WNBA’s rookie stars can’t say Diana Taurasi didn’t warn them.
“Reality is coming,” Taurasi told ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt during the NCAA tournament. “You look superhuman playing against some 18-year-olds, but you’re going to come play with some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time. There is going to be a transition period where you’re going to have to give yourself some grace as a rookie.
Clyde Drexler estimated Net Worth, Biography, Age, Height, Dating, Relationship Records, Salary, Income, Cars, Lifestyles & many more details have been updated below. Let’s check, How Rich is Clyde Drexler in 2019-2020? Scroll below and check more detailed information about Current Net worth as well as Monthly/Year Salary, Expense, Income Reports!BiographyClyde Drexler was born in New Orleans, LA on June 22, 1962. Hall of Fame guard/forward known as “Clyde the Glide,” who won an Olympic gold medal with the legendary Dream Team in 1992.
She has authored several books, including The Prayer Warrior's Way and The Art of War for Spiritual Battle, and has been featured in numerous media outlets, including The Oprah Winfrey Show and The 700 Club. Dr. Cindy Trimm is a highly successful spiritual leader, author, and life coach who has amassed a net worth of $15 million dollars. Her work has enabled her to build a multi-million dollar empire, with operations in multiple countries, and she has authored several books and been featured in many media outlets.
NEW YORK — Edna O’Brien, Ireland’s literary pride and outlaw who scandalized her native land with her debut novel “The Country Girls” before gaining international acclaim as a storyteller and iconoclast that found her welcomed everywhere from Dublin to the White House, has died. She was 93.
O’Brien died Saturday after a long illness, according to a statement by her publisher Faber and the literary agency PFD.
“A defiant and courageous spirit, Edna constantly strove to break new artistic ground, to write truthfully, from a place of deep feeling,” Faber said in a statement.
When Tina Turner, years before she became rock ‘n’ roll royalty, lent her iconic voice to Phil Spector’s “River Deep, Mountain High” in 1966, the single ranked at No. 3 on the UK charts. But, on U.S. Billboard charts that same year, it didn’t get higher than 88. In the recent HBO documentary “Tina,” an archival clip of Ike Turner, who shares a credit for the song, explained that the song didn’t hold up in America because, during that time, “Black artists had to go Top 10 on the R&B charts before the top radio stations would touch it.