The WNBA just named a Coach of the Month, and it’s well-deserved
· Yahoo Sports
Alex Sarama was relatively unknown when the Portland Fire announced he’d be their first-ever head coach. But, on Wednesday, when the WNBA announced that Sarama was named Coach of the Month, it came as no surprise. Sarama led the Fire to a 6-4 record in May and several improbable victories, while making a name for himself in broad basketball circles.
How did he get here?
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At just 30 years old, Sarama was an assistant coach for the Cleveland Cavaliers and became the director of player development.
He joined NBA Europe in 2020, became a Paris Basketball player improvement specialist in 2022, and was the director of methodology for the British Basketball League’s London Lions in 2023. In the 2023-2024 season, Sarama was an assistant coach for the Rip City Remix, the Portland Trail Blazers’ G League affiliate. Then, in 2024, he became an assistant for the Cavaliers.
STAFF OF THE MONTH 🙌
— Portland Fire (@theportlandfire) June 3, 2026
Behind-the-scenes when Head Coach Alex Sarama found out he was named @wnba Coach of the Month for May!
Shoutout to all of our amazing coaches and staff! pic.twitter.com/zzdOXR6dAd
Sarama is unique in that he is an advocate of the Constraints-Led Approach (CLA) to skill acquisition and practice design, a methodology that emphasises decision-making, adaptability, and game-representative learning environments rather than isolated and repetitive drills.
Sarama has cancelled morning shootarounds, had Fire players practice with just socks, and simulated specific drills with different constraints to emulate late-game scenarios.
Today at practice the Fire did shooting and dribbling drills in socks as a way to create more variables. Alex Sarama says he read about the concept of “differential learning” in a paper 6 years ago and incorporated it into his CLA principles. pic.twitter.com/7teZRtsDuu
— Sean Highkin (@highkin) May 13, 2026
The result?
The Fire are 6-5 and owners of the league’s 8th-best record, despite being one of two WNBA expansion teams. In May, they went 6-4, accruing two wins over the New York Liberty and a win over the Indiana Fever, among other star-studded squads.
On the court, Portland has been led by Carla Leite, who is averaging 15.2 points and 5.2 assists per game, both team-highs.
Bridget Carleton, selected No. 1 overall in the WNBA’s expansion draft, is averaging 14.7 points, 3.2 rebounds, and 2.1 steals per game, while Emily Englster has been the top shot blocker in the league, averaging 2.3 blocks per game. Engstler is also averaging 9.7 points, 4.2 rebounds, 1.5 steals, and 1.3 assists per game. And, Sarah Ashlee Barker has been huge off the bench, averaging 10 points and 4.5 rebounds per game.
In a video shared by the Fire, Sarama credited the players and his staff for his first-ever Coach of the Month honor.
“This isn’t possible without incredible players. This is really because of you guys, number one,” he said. “Everything we’ve asked you to do, you guys have done times a thousand. I couldn’t be more proud to coach you guys. This is going to be such a fun ride.”
“Secondly, it’s staff of the month. Not coach of the month. That’s everyone. Front office, performance, the incredible coaching staff we have. It’s every single one of us here.”