As the Dallas Wings prepare for their first season under Jose Fernandez, franchise guard Paige Bueckers has already expressed confidence in the direction of the team to build from a 10-34 finish during the 2025 WNBA campaign.
In a recent interview with ELLE, Bueckers addressed the Wings’ transition into a new era and spoke directly about her early impressions of Fernandez.
“I’ve built a relationship with Coach Jose already,” Bueckers told ELLE. “We’ve met a couple of times, just sat and got dinner and chopped it up, and I think he has a good plan for the team.”
For a player who serves as the organizational centerpiece, that endorsement carries weight well beyond a casual compliment.
Early Alignment Between Coach and Franchise Guard
Fernandez steps into a roster that is not rebuilding from scratch, but recalibrating.
Dallas finished 2025 with a clear offensive engine in Bueckers and foundational pieces already in place. The Wings are not searching for identity — they are refining it. Fernandez’s role is less about overhaul and more about alignment: defensive accountability, late-game execution, and system clarity around a high-usage guard.
Bueckers’ phrasing — “a good plan for the team” — suggests direction rather than improvisation. It signals that organizational messaging is consistent, defined and communicated directly to its most important player.
That early buy-in is critical. In the WNBA, where roster continuity can shift quickly through free agency and expansion dynamics, cohesion between head coach and primary decision-maker on the floor often determines how quickly systems translate into results.
USA Basketball Adds Another Touchpoint
What stands out is timing. These conversations occurred before training camp, before preseason installations, before draft additions. Rather than allowing familiarity to develop organically once the season begins, Bueckers and Fernandez initiated dialogue early.
That matters for a guard who averaged 19.2 points and 5.4 assists in 36 starts as a rookie, operating as both primary scorer and facilitator. The more synergy she has entering camp, the more efficiently roles can solidify around her as she continues to set the tone.
Fernandez’s background reinforces that approach. His 25-year tenure at South Florida was defined by long-term program building — nearly 500 wins, 19 postseason appearances, and sustained player development. He also captured two gold medals with USA Basketball’s U18 and U19 national teams, reflecting experience managing elite talent in short preparation windows.
Now, he inherits a professional roster anchored by an All-WNBA guard entering her second season.
A Critical Year Ahead for the Dallas Wings
Dallas holds the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 WNBA Draft, set for April 13, positioning the organization to further define its roster construction strategy.
Preseason begins April 30 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse against the Indiana Fever, followed by the regular-season opener May 9 in Indianapolis. The Wings will also host Indiana on Aug. 20 at American Airlines Center after drawing more than 20,000 fans in last year’s sold-out matchup.
The schedule is set. The roster is evolving. The leadership structure is new. Bueckers’ assessment provides a clear early signal: she believes in the blueprint.
For a franchise transitioning into a new coaching era while anchored by a rising star, that belief may be the most important starting point of all.