Categories
Technology

The Finest Transportable Energy Crops

Affordable and efficient portable power is a necessity these days to keep our electronic devices powered on the go. But there are literally dozens of options to choose from, making it extremely difficult to decide which mobile charging solution is best for you. We’ve sifted through tons of portable power options and come up with six of the best portable power stations to keep your smartphones, tablets, laptops, and other devices running while living off the grid.

The best overall:Jackery Explorer 1000

Adam Doud/Digital Trends

Jackery has been a mainstay in the portable power market for several years and today the company continues to set the standard. With three AC outlets, two USB-A and two USB-C plugs, you have plenty of options to keep your devices charged.

The 1002Wh lithium batteries in the Explorer 1000 provide up to eight laptop charges, 50 camera charges, or 100 phone charges. You can charge the Power Station from an AC outlet, a DC outlet in your car, or a compatible solar panel. A built-in LCD display also shows the generator’s current charge levels and depletion and recharge rates. Read the Jackery Explorer 1000 review.

The best for the campsite: EcoFlow Delta

Power plant EcoFlow Delta.

EcoFlow has become one of the most interesting options for use at remote campsites. The EcoFlow Delta offers an incredible 1,260 watt hours of battery life. Coupled with its 13 different charging ports – including six AC outlets – this portable generator actually provides enough power to power small devices like an LCD TV or mini fridge. Better still, the battery charges from empty to 80% in less than an hour.

The EcoFlow Delta has an integrated handle that makes it easy to transport to and from camp. It works even in extreme conditions and continues to work in temperatures from -4 degrees to 140 degrees Fahrenheit. When you need a powerhouse to keep your mobile devices, cameras, drones and other backcountry devices running, the EcoFlow Delta is a great option.

The best for the long haul: Anker 757

Anchor 757 PowerHouse rests on shelf.

Behemoth power plants don’t come cheap, and unlike a laptop or phone, there’s not exactly a store at the mall to lug your own into if it starts smoking. If you’re spending more than $1,000 on a device and you’re going to rely on it for emergencies, you’d better trust it to work for the long haul. For this security we recommend the anchor 757.

All of the brands we recommend here have solid reputations, but Anker offers something the others don’t: a five-year warranty. That’s a big deal considering that Jackery and EcoFlow only support theirs for two years. With 1,500 watts of AC power, you can power almost anything you would plug into a household outlet, and the 1,229 Wh capacity is enough to power a modern full-size refrigerator for about a day. Oh, it also looks like it would feel right at home aboard a space station, which is a refreshing pop of industrial design in a field of repetitive plastic boxes.

The best for the mobile professional: Goal Zero Sherpa 100AC

Goal Zero Sherpa 100AC power bank.

Modern streetfighters require a different level of portable power than other users. Not only do they need to keep their smartphones, tablets, and other devices charged, but they also need to keep their laptops powered and ready for work. The Goal Zero Sherpa 100AC was designed with them in mind, offering not only four USB ports, but also a power outlet and wireless charging pad. Its compact and lightweight design – weighing just 2 pounds – makes it easy to take with you almost anywhere.

The Sherpa 100AC is equipped with a high-capacity battery and can also be used to charge camera batteries, drones and Bluetooth speakers. For the on-the-go pro, this $300 battery pack is a godsend, keeping a variety of tech going no matter where they head next.

The best for your car: Noco Boost Plus GB40

NOCO GB40 Boost Plus booster battery.come back

A backup generator for your home is a smart option, but we also recommend taking a portable power source for your car. The Noco Boost Plus GB40 is a lightweight and compact device with a variety of features that come in handy in emergency situations. For example, the device comes with a set of jumper cables and can start a whopping 50 vehicles on a full charge before the internal battery itself needs to be charged.

The Noco Boost Plus GB40 is IP65 waterproof and includes a built-in flashlight with up to 100 lumens of illumination. It can even double as a flashing hazard warning light to warn oncoming traffic of roadside obstacles. The power bank is equipped with a USB port to power a smartphone or tablet on the go.

The best for smartphones: Anker PowerCore Speed

Anker PowerCore III 10K Wireless Backup Batteryanchor

Sometimes we need a power plant that’s a little more portable than the other options on this list. That’s where the Anker PowerCore III 10K Wireless comes in. This compact and lightweight battery pack packs a 10,000mAh battery, which is enough to charge an iPhone at least twice. With its automatic detection and surge protection circuitry, the PowerCore keeps our mobile devices safe while charging their internal batteries.

The PowerCore III 10K Wireless features two USB battery ports, both of which support Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 technology. This feature safely charges devices almost four times faster than usual – a handy option when charging on the go. The most useful part of this battery is its Qi wireless charging feature, eliminating the need for additional fiddling with cables. It even has a little built-in kickstand so you can enjoy a show while your phone charges.

Editor’s Recommendations



Categories
Technology

New EU battery guidelines imply huge hassle for producers and tech giants

EU lawmakers have agreed on a new set of rules aimed at making batteries in the EU more sustainable and reusable.

The regulations will cover the entire battery life cycle: from material extraction through industrial production to disposal. They apply to all types of batteries sold in the EU, including portable batteries used in electronic devices, industrial batteries, SLI batteries used in automotive applications, and batteries used in two-wheelers and electric vehicles.

The green requirements of the newly agreed rules mark an impressive milestone for the Union as it aims to advance its energy transition and increase its competitiveness in the sector.

Join TNW in Valencia!

The heart of technology comes to the heart of the Mediterranean

However, they could pose a number of challenges for manufacturers – particularly in the consumer electronics and automotive industries.

Under the new rules, all companies selling batteries in the EU market must implement a “due diligence policy” that addresses the social and environmental risks associated with the sourcing, processing and trading of raw materials .

They must also use a set percentage of recycled materials: 16% cobalt, 85% lead, 6% lithium, and 6% nickel.

In addition, the EU has set ambitious collection targets to ensure a steady flow of recycled materials. For electronic devices, the targets are set at 45% by 2023 and 73% by 2030; 100% for electric vehicles.

These developments could prove particularly challenging for global automakers and battery manufacturers, as they would need to prepare for the new demands by carefully reviewing their supply chains, reviewing their supply chains, reassessing their operations and entering into strategic partnerships with recyclers.

Meanwhile, portable batteries in electronic devices must be designed so that consumers can easily remove and replace them.

This threatens the current practices of major consumer electronics brands such as Apple and Samsung.

The vast majority of smartphones and laptops currently on the market have built-in batteries – arguing that this design allows for the development of slimmer and longer-lasting products.

In the event of a battery failure, consumers are referred to dedicated service shops where the repair or replacement will be performed by a technician.

The new battery rules, along with EU “right to repair” legislation, would not only mean fewer maintenance wins for manufacturers, but also the prospect of brands having to rethink the overall design of their products.

The Battery Regulation is yet to be passed by Parliament and Council and if passed will set a high green standard for the global battery market for years to come.

Categories
Science

Limitations of the Central Restrict Theorem – Watts Up With That?

Guest Essay by Kip Hansen — 17 December 2022

The Central Limit Theorem is particularly good and valuable especially when have many measurements that have slightly different results.  Say, for instance, you wanted to know very precisely the length of a particular stainless-steel rod.  You measure it and get 502 mm.  You expected 500 mm.  So you measure it again:  498 mm.  And again and again: 499, 501. You check the conditions:  temperature the same each time?  You get a better, more precise ruler.  Measure again: 499.5 and again 500.2 and again 499.9 — one hundred times you measure.  You can’t seem to get exactly the same result. Now you can use the Central Limit Theory (hereafter CLT) to good result.  Throw your 108 measurements into a distribution chart or CLT calculator and you’ll see your central value very darned close to 500 mm and you’ll have an idea of the variation in measurements.

While the Law of Large Numbers is based on repeating the same experiment, or measurement, many times, thus could be depended on in this exact instance, the CLT only requires a largish population (overall data set) and the taking of the means of many samples of that data set.  

It would take another post (possibly a book) to explain the all the benefits and limitations of the Central Limit Theory (CLT), but I will use a few examples to introduce that topic.

Example 1:  

You take 100 measurements of the diameter of ball bearings produced by a machine on the same day.  You can calculate the mean and can estimate a variance in the data.  But you want a better idea, so you realize that you have 100 measurements from each Friday for the past year.  50 data sets of 100 measurements, which if sampled would give you fifty samples out of 306 possible daily samples of the total 3,060 measurements if you had 100 samples for every work day (six days a week, 51 weeks).

The central limit theory is about probability.  It will tell you what the most likely (probable) mean diameter is of all your ball bearings produced on that machine.  But, if you are presented with only the mean and the SD, and not the full distribution, it will tell you very little about how many ball bearings are within specification and thus have value to the company.   The CLT can not tell you how many or what percentage of the ball bearings would have been within the specifications (if measured when produced) and how many outside spec (and thus useless).  Oh, the Standard Deviation will not tell you either — it is not a measurement or quantity, it is a creature of probability.

Example 2:

The Khan Academy gives a fine example of the limitations of the Central Limit Theorem (albeit, not intentionally) in the following example (watch the YouTube if you like, about ten minutes) :

The image is the distribution diagram for our oddly loaded die (one of a pair of dice).  It is loaded to come up 1 or 6, or 3 or 4, but never 2 or 5.  But twice more likely to come 1 or 6 than 3 or 4. The image shows a diagram of expected distribution of the results of many rolls with the ratios of two 1s, one 3, one 4, and two 6s. Taking the means of random samples of this distribution out of 1000 rolls (technically, “the sampling distribution for the sample mean”), say samples of twenty rolls repeatedly, will eventually lead to a “normal distribution” with a fairly clearly visible (calculable) mean and SD.  

Here, relying on the Central Limit Theorem, we return a mean of 3.5 (with some standard deviation).(We take “the mean of this sampling distribution” – the mean of means, an average of averages).

Now, if we take a fair die (one not loaded) and do the same thing, we will get the same mean of 3.5 (with some standard deviation).

Note:  These distributions of frequencies of the sampled means are from 1000 random rolls (in Excel, using fx=RANDBETWEEN(1,6) – that for the loaded die was modified as required) and sampled every 25 rolls.  Had we sampled a data set of 10,000 random rolls, the central limit would narrow and the mean of the sampled means — 3.5 —would become more distinct.

The Central Limit Theorem works exactly as claimed.  If one collects enough samples (randomly selected data) from a population (or dataset…) and finds the means of those samples, the means will tend towards a standard or normal distribution – as we see in the charts above – the values of the means tend towards the (in this case known) true mean.  In man-on-the-street language, the means are clumping in the center around the value of the mean at 3.5, making the characteristic “hump” of a Normal Distribution.  Remember, this resulting mean is really the “mean of the sampled means”.

So, our fair die and our loaded die both produce approximate normal distributions when testing a 1000 random roll data set and sampling means.  The distribution of the mean would improve – get closer to the known mean – if we had ten or one hundred times more of the random rolls and equally larger number of samples. Both the fair and loaded die have the same mean (though slightly different variance or deviation). I say “known mean” because we can, in this case, know the mean by straight-forward calculation, we have all the data points of the population and know the mean of the real-world distribution of the dies themselves. 

In this setting, this is a true but almost totally useless result.   Any high school math nerd could have just looked at the dies, maybe made a few rolls with each,  and told you the same:  the range of values is 1 through 6;  the width of the range is 5; the mean of the range is 2.5 + 1 = 3.5.  There is nothing more to discover by using the Central Limit Theorem against a data base of 1000 rolls of the one die – though it will also tell you the approximate Standard Deviation – which is also almost entirely useless.

Why do I say useless?  Because context is important.  Dice are used for games involving chance (well, more properly, probability) in which it is assumed that the sides of the dice that land facing up do so randomly.  Further, each roll of a die or pair of dice is totally independent of any previous rolls.

Impermissible Values

As with all averages of every type, the means are just numbers. They may or not have physically sensible meanings. 

One simple example is that a single die will never ever come up at the mean value of 3.5.  The mean is correct but is not a possible (permissible) value for the roll of one die – never in a million rolls.

Our loaded die can only roll:  1, 3, 4 or 6.  Our fair die can only roll 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6.  There just is no 3.5. 

This is so basic and so universal that many will object to it as nonsense.  But there are many physical metrics that have impermissible values. The classic and tired old cliché is the average number of children being 2.4.  And we all know why, there are no “.4” children in any family – children come in whole numbers only.

However, if for some reason you want or need an approximate, statistically-derived mean for your intended purpose, then using the principles of the CLT is your ticket.  Remember, to get a true mean of a set of values, one must add all the values together divide by the number of values. 

The Central Limit Theorem method does not reduce uncertainty:

There is a common pretense (def: “Something imagined or pretended“) used often in science today, which treats a data set (all the measurements) as a sample, then take samples of the sample, use a CLT calculator, and call the result a truer mean than the mean of the actual measurements.  Not only “truer”, but more precise.  However, while the CLT value achieved may have small standard deviations, that fact is not the same as more accuracy of the measurements or less uncertainty regarding what the actual mean of the data set would be.  If the data set is made up of uncertain measurements, then the true mean will be uncertain to the same degree. 

Distribution of Values May be More Important

The Central Limit Theory-provided mean would be of no use whatever when considering the use of this loaded die in gambling.   Why? …  because the gambler wants to know how many times in a dozen die-rolls he can expect to get a “6”, or if rolling a pair of loaded dice, maybe a “7” or “11”.  How much of an edge over the other gamblers does he gain if he introduces the loaded dice into the game when it’s his roll? 

(BTW: I was once a semi-professional stage magician, and I assure you, introducing a pair of loaded dice is easy on stage or  in a street game with all its distractions but nearly impossible in a casino.)

Let’s see this in frequency distributions of rolls of our dice, rolling just one die, fair and loaded (1000 simulated random rolls in Excel):

And if we are using a pair of fair or loaded dice (many games use two dice):

On the left, fair dice return more sevens than any other value.  You can see this is tending towards the mean (of two dice) as expected.  Two 1’s or two 6’s are rare for fair dice … as there is only a single unique combination each for the combined values of 2 and 12.  Lots of ways to get a 7. 

Our loaded dice return even more 7’s.  In fact, over twice as many 7’s as any other number, almost 1-in-3 rolls.   Also, the loaded dice have a much better chance of rolling 2 or 12, five times better than with fair dice.   The loaded dice don’t ever return 3 or 11. 

Now here we see that if we depended on the statistical (CLT) central value of the means of rolls to prove the dice were fair (which, remember is 3.5 for both fair and loaded dice) we have made a fatal error.  The house (the casino itself) expects the distribution on the left from a pair of fair dice and thus the sets the rules to give the house a small percentage in its favor.

The gambler needs the actual distribution probability of the values of the rolls to make betting decisions. 

If there are any dicing gamblers reading, please explain to non-gamblers in comments what an advantage this would be. 

Finding and Using Means Isn’t Always What You Want

This insistence on using means produced approximately using the Central Limit Theorem (and its returned Standard Deviations) can create non-physical and useless results when misapplied.  The CLT means could have misled us into believing that the loaded dice were fair, as they share a common mean with fair dice. But the CLT is a tool of probability and not a pragmatic tool that we can use to predict values of measurements in the real world. The CLT does not predict or provide values – it only provides estimated means and estimated deviations from that mean and these are just numbers.

Our Khan academy teacher, almost in the hushed tones of a description of an extra-normal phenomenon, points out that taking random same-sized samples from a data set (population of collected measurements, for instance) will also produce a Normal Distribution of the sampled sums!  The triviality of this fact should be apparent – if the “sums divided by the [same] number of components” (the means of the samples) are normally distributed then the sums of the samples must need also be normally distributed (basic algebra).

In the Real World

Whether considering gambling with dice – loaded and fair – or evaluating the usability of ball bearing from the machinery we are evaluating – we may well find the estimated means and deviations obtained by applying the CLT are not always what we need and might even mislead us.

If we need to know which, and how many, of our ball bearings will fit the bearing races of a tractor manufacturing customer, we will need some analysis system and quality assurance tool closer to reality. 

If our gambler is going to bet his money on the throw of a pair of specially-prepared loaded dice, he needs the full potential distribution, not of the means, but the probability distribution of the throws. 

Averages or Means:  One number to rule them all

Averages seem to be the sweetheart of data analysts of all stripes.  Oddly enough, even when they have a complete data set like daily high tides for the year, which they could just look at visually, they want to find the mean.

The mean water level, which happens to be 27.15 ft  (rounded) does not tell us much.  The Mean High Water tells us more, but not nearly as much as the simple graph of the data points.  For those unfamiliar with astronomic tides, most tides are on a ≈13 hour cycle, with a Higher High Tide (MHHW) and a less-high High Tide (MHW).  That explains what seems to be two traces above.

Note: the data points are actually a time series of a small part of a cycle, we are pulling out the set of the two higher points and the two lower points in a graph like this.  One can see the usefulness of a different plotting above each visually revealing more data than the other.

When launching my sailboat at a boat ramp near the station, the graph of actual high tide’s data points shows me that I need to catch the higher of the two high tides (Higher High Water), which sometimes gives me more than an extra two feet of water (over the mean) under the keel.  If I used the mean and attempted to launch on the lower of the two high tides (High Water), I could find myself with a whole foot less water than I expected and if I had arrived with the boat expecting to pull it out with the boat trailer at the wrong point of the tide cycle, I could find five feet less water than at the MHHW.  Far easier to put the boat in or take it out at the highest of the tides.

With this view of the tides for a month, we can see that each of the two higher tides themselves have a little harmonic cycle, up and down.

Here we have the distribution of values of the high tides.  Doesn’t tell us very much – almost nothing about the tides that is numerically useful – unless of course, one only wants the means, which would be just as easily eye-ball guessed from the charts above or this chart — we would get a vaguely useful “around 29 feet.”

In this case, we have all the data points for the high tides at this station for the month, and could just calculate the mean directly and exactly (within the limits of the measurements) if we needed that – which I doubt would be the case.   But at least we would have a true precise mean (plus the measurement uncertainty, of course) but I think we would find that in many practical senses, it is useless – in practice, we need the whole cycle and its values and its timing.

Why One Number?

Finding means (averages) gives a one-number result.  Which is oh-so–much easier to look at and easier to understand than all that messy, confusing data!

In a previous post on a related topic, one commenter suggested we could use the CLT to find “the 2021 average maximum daily temperature at some fixed spot.”  When asked why one would want do to so, the commenter replied “To tell if it is warmer regarding max temps than say 2020 or 1920, obviously.”  [I particularly liked the ‘obviously’.] Now, any physicists reading here?  Why does the requested single number — “2021 average maximum daily temperature” — not tell us much of anything that resembles “if it is warmer regarding max temps than say 2020 or 1920”?   If we also had a similar single number for the “1920 average maximum daily temperature” at the same fixed spot, we would only know if our number for 2021 was higher or lower than the number for 1920.  We would not know if “it was warmer” (in regards to anything).

At the most basic level, the “average maximum daily temperature” is not a measurement of temperature or warmness at all, but rather, as the same commenter admitted, is “just a number”.

If that isn’t clear to you (and, admittedly, the relationship between temperature and “warmness” and “heat content of the air” can be tricky), you’ll have to wait for a future essay on the topic. 

It might be possible to tell if there is some temperature gradient at the fixed place using a fuller temperature record for that place…but comparing one single number with another single number does not do that.

And that is the major limitation of the Central Limit Theorem

The CLT is terrific at producing an approximate mean value of some population of data/measurements without having to directly calculate it from a full set of measurements.   It gives one a SINGLE NUMBER from a messy collection of hundreds, thousands, millions of data points. It allows one to pretend that the single number (and its variation, as SDs) faithfully represents the whole data set/population-of-measurements. However, that is not true – it only gives the approximate mean, which is an average,  and because it is an average (an estimated mean) it carries all of the limitations and disadvantages of all other types of averages. 

The CLT is a model, a method, that will produce a Mean Value from ANY large enough set of numbers – the numbers do not need to be about anything real, they can be entirely random with no validity about anything.  The CLT method pops out the estimated mean, closer and closer to a single value whenever more and more samples from the larger population are supplied it.  Even when dealing with scientific measurements, the CLT will discover a mean (that looks very precise when “the uncertainty of the mean” is attached) just as easily from sloppy measurements, from fraudulent measurements, from copy-and-pasted findings, from “just-plain-made-up” findings,  from “I generated my finding using a random number generator” findings and from findings with so much uncertainty as to hardly be called measurements at all. 

Bottom Lines:

1.   Using the CLT is useful if one has a large data set (many data points) and wishes, for some reason, to find an approximate mean of the data set, then using the principles of the Central Limit Theorem; finding the means of multiple samples from the data set, making a distribution diagram, and with enough samples, by finding the mean of the means, the CLT will point to the approximate mean, and give an idea of the variance in the data.

2.  Since the result will be a mean, an average, and an approximate mean at that, then all the caveats and cautions that apply to the use of averages apply to the result.

3.  The mean found through use of the CLT cannot and will not be less uncertain than the uncertainty of the actual mean of original uncertain measurements themselves.  However, it is almost universally claimed that “the uncertainty of the mean” (really the SD or some such) thus found is many times smaller than the uncertainty of the actual mean of the original measurements (or data points) of the data set. 

This claim is a so generally accepted and firmly held as a Statisticians’ Article of Faith that many commenting below will deride the idea of its falseness and present voluminous “proofs” from their statistical manuals to show that they such methods do reduce uncertainty.

4.  When doing science and evaluating data sets, the urge to seek a “single number” to represent the large, messy, complex and complicated data sets is irresistible to many – and can lead to serious misunderstandings and even comical errors. 

5.  It is almost always better to do much more nuanced evaluation of a data set than simply finding and substituting a single number — such as a mean and then pretending that that single number can stand in for the real data.  

# # # # #

Author’s Comment:

One Number to Rule Them All as a principal, go-to-first approach in science has been disastrous for reliability and trustworthiness of scientific research. 

Substituting statistically-derived single numbers for actual data, even when the data itself is available and easily accessible, has been and is an endemic malpractice of today’s science. 

I blame the ease of “computation without prior thought” – we all too often are looking for The Easy Way.  We throw data sets at our computers filled with analysis models and statistical software which are often barely understood and way, way too often without real thought as to the caveats, limitations and consequences of varying methodologies.   

I am not the first or only one to recognize this – maybe one of the last – but the poor practices continue and doubting the validity of these practices draws criticism and attacks.

I could be wrong now, but I don’t think so! (h/t Randy Newman)

# # # # #

Like this:

Like Loading…

Categories
Sport

What Brittney Griner’s return for the 2023 WNBA season means for her and the Phoenix Mercury

Brittney Griner said in her first public statement since her nearly 300-day incarceration in Russia on Friday that she intends to play the 2023 season in the WNBA for Phoenix Mercury.

It’s promising news for the basketball world, though since Griner’s release last week, most WNBA players, executives, and fans have tried not to commit to what her return to the United States would mean for the star’s basketball future, or if she’ll ever have one Set foot back on the pitch.

“We’re going to follow her example, we’re going to do whatever she wants,” Mercury President Vince Kozar told ESPN last week. “Part of the joy she’s brought people is how she plays and how she plays and who she is when she plays.

“And I’d be lying if I didn’t say there’s some kind of anticipation or excitement about the idea of ​​everyone going to experience that again, but that’s not the most important thing.”

Still, the game doesn’t seem to have strayed too far from Griner’s mind since returning home. She did light basketball practice on Sunday, ESPN reported, where her first act was a dunk.

The prospect of Griner — a WNBA champion, eight-time All-Star, three-time All-WNBA first-team selector and former MVP contender — speaking out with the Mercury when the season ends May 19, about 23 weeks Her release is exciting for basketball enthusiasts, both those who have followed Griner’s turbulent career since her Baylor days and those who have begun to follow her story more closely over the past year.

ESPN.com’s Kevin Pelton, Alexa Philippou and MA Voepel analyze what Griner’s announcement means for Mercury, Phoenix’s focus on free agency, Griner’s basketball career and more.

What questions does Griner’s return immediately answer for the Mercury?

Griner’s return illustrates the playstyle we’ve come to expect from Phoenix.

Mercury’s unexpected run for a playoff spot came unorthodoxly without Griner and fellow All-Stars Skylar Diggins-Smith (not on the team due to personal reasons) and Diana Taurasi (quadricep injury). After parting ways with Tina Charles midseason, Phoenix leaned into small ball with first-year coach Vanessa Nygaard playing a frontcourt of 6-foot-1 Sophie Cunningham and 6-3 Brianna Turner.

2 relatives

Getting 6-9 Griner back makes the little ball an instant reminder for the Mercury. With her and Turner, Phoenix is ​​covered in the run-up, reuniting the duo that led the team to the 2021 WNBA Finals. Griner has been a dominant force this postseason, averaging 21.8 PPG, 8.4 RPG, and 3.0 APG, and shooting 56% from the field.

Technically, Griner is an unrestricted free agent as the WNBA fulfilled the final season of her contract in 2022 while she was wrongly imprisoned. Because the Mercury used the core designation for Griner when she reached free agency in 2020 and signed a three-year deal, she is no longer eligible to be called a core player.

However, Griner’s statement made it clear that she intends to return to the WNBA in Phoenix. So the Mercury can count on having both her and Taurasi, who hinted last month that she plans to return to the Valley for a 19th season. – Kevin Pelton

What questions remain for the team and how might they impact Mercury’s approach to freehand?

Sources told ESPN’s Josh Weinfuss that Mercury’s priority is re-signing Griner.

However, this leaves many question marks. Phoenix’s third cornerstone, Diggins-Smith, announced in October that she was expecting her second child. Besides Diggins-Smith and Turner, the Mercury only have one other player signed for 2023: forward Diamond DeShields.

Phoenix’s other free agents include Cunningham (who is restricted) and 2021 starter Kia Nurse, who missed the entirety of last season to rehab the ACL injury she sustained during Mercury’s playoff run. If both Griner and Taurasi return to their previous supermax salaries, it probably won’t be realistic for Phoenix to re-sign Cunningham and Nurse while staying under the WNBA’s tough salary cap.

Due to the DeShields trade, the Mercury don’t have a first-round pick this year, which will make upgrading the roster a challenge — but not nearly as difficult as replacing Griner’s production was last season. – Pelton

Last we saw Brittney Griner on court in the WNBA, the Phoenix Mercury Center finished second in MVP voting. Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

After 10 months in prison, what can we expect physically from Griner?

We do not know it. It’s difficult to predict where Griner will be physically by May 19, Mercury’s season opener at the Los Angeles Sparks (May 21 is Mercury’s opener at home at the Footprint Center). That’s 154 days from now, about half the time Griner was imprisoned in Russia. Getting back to the demands of a professional athlete after 10 months of little to no physical activity—at least compared to the standard high-level athletes—will be a challenge unlike anything Griner has experienced before.

Just as important, if not more so, than her physical health is Griner’s mental health. Even before her incarceration in Russia, Griner had publicly disclosed that she had sought mental health treatment and said the need to address her mental health led her to exit the 2020 WNBA bubble early leaving. Surveillance, like monitoring Griner in the months (and years) after her release and as she tries to get her basketball back, will no doubt be a priority for those in her camp.

Prior to her wrongful imprisonment, Griner had a relatively healthy pro career, playing 254 games in nine seasons, averaging as many as 25.9 minutes per game per season and over 30 minutes in all but two seasons.

The last time we saw her hit the floor in the WNBA in 2021, she finished second in MVP voting after suffering a tear in the second half of the regular season, eventually propelling the Mercury to a surprise WNBA spot. Finale 2021 brought where they fell in the Chicago skies.

Ahead of 2022, do these numbers tell us much about what their future might be in the WNBA, especially as the 2023 season begins? Maybe not, and understandably given the life-changing experience Griner just went through. But if Mercury’s statements are any indication, whether Griner can repeat their pre-incarceration level of play isn’t of paramount importance. – Alexa Philippou

What does Griner bring to the Mercury beyond her on-court skills?

For the most part, Griner was an uplifting presence for the Mercury and someone who gets along well and communicates with her teammates. It can even facilitate communication between teammates who might otherwise not get along well.

In the 2020 COVID-19 bubble season, Griner was careful to address her mental health, actions she was very open about, and left the bubble early. But for the most part, she’s been a big part of the Mercury cohesion over the years.

Last season, the Mercury lacked that. With a new coach, daily concern for Griner’s well-being, apparent tensions between Taurasi and Diggins-Smith, Charles’ departure and injuries, it seemed like Phoenix might even make the playoffs. Turner, who was one of the team’s rocks, admitted after the first-round loss to the Las Vegas Aces that she hoped she never had to experience a season like this again. Mercury missed Griner’s personality very much.

But if you’re looking for light in that darkness, note that Turner and Cunningham have improved as players and both have taken on greater responsibilities. Both also have good friendships with Griner. With Cunningham returning as a free agent, these three are a good core of positive vibes for the Mercury.

Everyone who knows Griner describes her as someone who usually has a laid-back, easy-going personality and wants everyone to get along. She can sometimes facilitate this by making a joke or being “silly” because she doesn’t really bring ego into the team dynamic. It’s hard to gauge how what she went through might affect her psyche. But her willingness to address her basketball future so soon after her incarceration shows she still views the sport as she always has: more of her safe place and sanctuary. — MA Voepel

Categories
Entertainment

Beyoncé’s Membership Renaissance occasion in LA offered out in minutes

While it’s no secret that Beyoncé’s Renaissance album was a huge hit among listeners, fans were surprised to see how quickly an upcoming listening event sold out!

Beyoncé & Amazon Music unveil “Club Renaissance”

On Thursday, the Beyhive received a surprise announcement about an event called Club Renaissance. An SMS alert directed fans to clubrenaissance.com where they could learn more about the event.

The Amazon Music Twitter account also shared a flyer online. According to the promo, Club Renaissance will be held on Saturday and Sunday. It is described as a 21+ event where fans can “experience a renaissance in spatial audio”.

Amazon Music’s tweet also informed people that the exact location of the Los Angeles event would be announced to “confirmed guests” on Saturday.

12.17 & 12.18 🪩 #CLUBRENAISSANCE

This event is 21+. One (1) ticket per person. Tickets are not transferrable. Location will be announced to confirmed guests on Saturday 12/17. https://t.co/sHELkoB5Bl pic.twitter.com/EnCLsCVUlp

— Amazon Music (@amazonmusic) December 15, 2022

To the dismay of Twitter, tickets sell out in minutes

According to Variety, Club Renaissance was so hyped that it sold out in minutes.

Understandably, disappointed fans who were keen to attend the event took to social media to vent their frustration. Check out what some people had to say below.

I’ve been waiting for Beyoncé to pick me up in GEORGIA since she texted me about a freaking club renaissance in LA: pic.twitter.com/rufX7XB9DN

— Scarlet Witch Stan Acc (@Forever_Syd_) December 15, 2022

The #ClubRenaissance tickets already SOLD OUT?? pic.twitter.com/txcAthRSJ2

— 💎 | Fan account (@BadBitchCarta) December 15, 2022

In the process of starting a support group for anyone who couldn’t pass REAL ID verification to get into #CLUBRENAISSANCE. See you soon. I love you. I am you.

— Myles Warden (@ReallyMighty) December 15, 2022

The SZA presale sucked and now Club Renaissance is sold out while I had the ticket in my damn shopping cart…… someone jinxed me WHAT HAVE I DONE??!! pic.twitter.com/9nWa4i9Gq0

— raymond (@raymondmiguel_) December 15, 2022

Just as I clicked the link, the SECOND Beyoncé texted me and I still haven’t gotten Club Renaissance tickets 😭

— Jordan ✨ (@merelyaladdin) December 15, 2022

I’m looking at flights to LA so I can go to Club Renaissance knowing I only have two dollars and a prayer in my bank account pic.twitter.com/f67r6SSyF7

— Barbara Manatees BBL (@imnotchase) December 15, 2022

I do my BEST BEYONCÈ impression to get into Club Renaissance: pic.twitter.com/izaYwQK2Tx

— Thaddeus C. Anime NYC (@ItsHippyPotter) December 16, 2022

WHY WOULD BEYONCÉ HAVE A CLUB RENAISSANCE IN LA IN TWO DAYS AND DECIDE TO SELL THE TICKETS FIRST
pic.twitter.com/iZKnIvaGWZ

— TAYDIZZY ALL UP IN YOUR MIND (@imtaylordeon) December 15, 2022

BEYONCÉ HOW TO GET FROM TEXAS TO LA IN 24 HOURS AND I’M BROKE??!!???? #CLUBRENAISSANCE pic.twitter.com/ZFhxp0adFF

— Act i: 👀🤲🏽🪩 (@_chvse) December 15, 2022

Previous Club Renaissance events were more exclusive

Variety reports that the album’s New York release party in August, which was attended by numerous stars including Chloe Bailey, Normani and Kendrick Lamar, was the first incarnation of the event.

Beyoncé later opened a Paris-based club Renaissance – with artists like Doja Cat and Tyler, the Creator. Additionally, the Parisians reportedly had a chance to win tickets via a social media contest.

Well, for the Los Angeles event, people were actually given the opportunity to get tickets for themselves, although it didn’t really work out for many.

Were you one of the lucky Beyhive members who managed to snag tickets to Club Renaissance? Also, what are your thoughts on the event being such a short notice and being only available in LA?