Young, Citron & Mabrey Earn WNBA All-Star Reserve Spots
Three former Notre Dame stars - Arike Ogunbowale, Jewell Loyd, and Marina Mabrey - have been named WNBA All-Star reserves, a rare triple nod for one college program.

Three Irish Stars Head to the WNBA All-Star Game
Three players with deep roots at Notre Dame have been selected as WNBA All-Star reserves, according to reporting by the South Bend Tribune. Sonia Citron, Olivia Miles - wait - the players named are Young, Citron, and Mabrey, three standouts from the Notre Dame program who have carried their college success into the professional ranks.
The selection of three players from the same college pipeline to a single WNBA All-Star roster is a rare achievement and a signal of just how productive Notre Dame's program has been at developing professional talent. The reserves are chosen by WNBA coaches, making the honor a peer recognition of consistent high-level play during the regular season.
All three players earned their spots through regular-season performances strong enough to draw votes from coaches around the league - coaches who see these players up close every night and vote accordingly.
What the Selections Mean for Notre Dame's Legacy
Notre Dame has long been one of the premier programs in women's college basketball, and the professional careers of its alumni have backed that reputation up. Having Young, Citron, and Mabrey all representing the Irish at the All-Star level in the same year underlines how the program consistently sends players to the WNBA who can compete at the highest level.
Reserve selections often go to players who put up steady, high-value numbers across a full half-season of play. Coaches around the league cast their votes based on what they see on film and on the floor, which gives the reserve selections a credibility that is hard to argue with.
For fans of Notre Dame basketball, the triple selection is a point of pride - a reminder that the program's influence does not stop at graduation.
WNBA All-Star Game Context
The WNBA All-Star Game brings together the league's top performers each summer. Starters are typically voted in by fans, while reserves are determined by the coaching vote. Both routes carry weight, but the coaching vote is often seen as the more purely basketball-driven measure of a player's standing among peers and professionals.
The game gives players a platform to showcase their games in front of a wider audience and draws significant attention to the league at the midpoint of the season. For younger players, an All-Star nod can mark a turning point in how they are perceived across the league.
With Young, Citron, and Mabrey all making the cut, Notre Dame's fingerprints are firmly on the 2025 WNBA All-Star roster. The South Bend Tribune, which has covered Notre Dame athletics closely for decades, first reported the news of the three selections.










