Sue Bird's final WNBA seasons, record Tokyo Olympic gold to be subject of documentary

The final season of Sue Bird's illustrious basketball career will be captured in documentary form.

"Sue Bird: In The Clutch" is already underway with never-before-seen footage from the 2021 WNBA season and last summer's Tokyo Olympics, according to Variety. It will cover the 2022 season — her 19th and what looks like final one in the league — as well as life with fiancée Megan Rapinoe, social justice work and post-retirement plans.

Alex Gibney's award-winning Jigsaw Productions is leading the project with Sarah Dowland directing and producing. Executive producing are Stacey Offman and Richard Perello for Jigsaw; Jay Ellis and Aaron Bergma for Black Bar Mitzvah; Ryan Ruocco of Nike's Waffle Iron Entertainment; and Lindsay Kagawa Colas, Bird's agent at Wasserman.

“We’re excited to give this once-in-a-generation athlete the send-off she deserves,” Gibney said, via Variety. “It’s an amazing opportunity to explore the impact of Sue and the wider WNBA — not just on the game of basketball, but on social justice, activism, and women in sports.”

In the one-minute tease Bird shared on Twitter, the Seattle Storm great says she has redefined what she views as legacy. It includes championships, of which she has four in the WNBA, but also the "lasting impact that I can leave."

Bird returns for final WNBA season

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - AUGUST 12: Sue Bird #10 of the Seattle Storm celebrates with teammates after a 79-59 win against the Connecticut Sun during the 2021 Commissioner's Cup Championship Game at Footprint Center on August 12, 2021 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - AUGUST 12: Sue Bird #10 of the Seattle Storm celebrates with teammates after a 79-59 win against the Connecticut Sun during the 2021 Commissioner's Cup Championship Game at Footprint Center on August 12, 2021 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) (Norm Hall via Getty Images)

Bird announced last week she would answer the fans calls and return to the league for "one more year." It will be her 19th playing and 21st since being drafted No. 1 overall out of Connecticut in 2002. She's coming off a record fifth Olympic gold medal at the Tokyo Games and was recently named the 2021 USA Basketball Female Athlete of the Year. She led the Storm to its fourth WNBA championship in 2020, making her the only player in WNBA or NBA history to lead a team to a title in three different decades (2004, ’10,’18 and ’20).

Interview subjects for the documentary include Rapinoe, who proposed in October 2020; Phoenix Mercury guard Diana Taurasi, Bird's UConn teammate; Storm teammates, NBA stars, celebrities and political leaders. Bird has been heavily involved in voting rights and helped the league lead the visible campaign for Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock. She also co-founded her own media company, Togethxr.

The documentary is a rarity in women's sports, though there have been more in the past couple of years as companies meet viewer demand. Rapinoe was involved in the recent HBO Max docuseries, "LFG," on the U.S. women's national team's ongoing fight for equal pay. Bird's former Team USA teammate, Maya Moore, was the center of the ESPN "30 for 30" documentary installment on her social justice pursuits.

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