WNBA Head Coaches 2025 | One and Done | Tyler Marsh, Chicago Sky

Tyler Marsh rode into Chicago on hype he never earned — a glorified assistant clinging to Becky Hammon’s coattails in Vegas, handed the…

WNBA Head Coaches 2025 | One and Done | Tyler Marsh, Chicago Sky

Tyler Marsh rode into Chicago on hype he never earned — a glorified assistant clinging to Becky Hammon’s coattails in Vegas, handed the keys to a proud franchise. Twelve months later? The charade is over. The Chicago Sky aren’t just bad; they’re an unwatchable dumpster fire under Marsh’s clueless command. Seven wins. Eighteen losses. A .388 win percentage that reeks of incompetence.

His “system” is a joke. The defense? Soft as butter, hemorrhaging 89 points a night while opponents laugh their way to the rim. Young stars like Angel Reese and Kamilla Cardoso aren’t developing — they’re regressing, shackled by Marsh’s chaotic rotations and nonexistent adjustments. Remember that “championship pedigree”? Gone. Vanished. Replaced by a team that quits by halftime and a locker room that’s checked out.

This isn’t rebuilding — it’s negligence. Marsh took a roster packed with talent and turned it into the WNBA’s punching bag. Home games at Wintrust Arena feel like funerals. Fans boo. Attendance tanks. And through it all? Marsh stands there, clipboard in hand, out of answers and out of time.

One season. That’s all it took to expose him. Chicago deserves better than this fraud. When the axe falls — and it will fall — nobody will blink. Tyler Marsh isn’t a coach. He’s a cautionary tale.