Avatar photoBy Ron CrawfordJune 9, 2026 6:35 pm

WNBA Prop Picks: TWO-THREE ZONE Player Props for June 10, 2026

This is the player-prop companion to our WNBA Commissioner’s Cup sides and totals breakdown from the same TWO-THREE ZONE show. Beyond the sides and totals, the panel — Ron Crawford, Bo Dunn, Justin “Stacks” McKelvey, and Jevon Jones — stacked up a full slate of WNBA player props for Wednesday night’s Commissioner’s Cup games. Here is every prop the crew called, who’s on it, and the reasoning behind each.

Connecticut Sun at Toronto Tempo

Marina Mabrey Over 17.5 Points (-119) — Justin “Stacks” McKelvey

Stacks found a revenge angle he likes: Marina Mabrey over 17.5 points. Mabrey now suits up for Toronto and faces her old Connecticut club, and after a quiet nine-point outing in her previous game, Stacks expects a bounce-back, motivated performance against a Connecticut side the panel is uniformly down on. With Toronto projected to control the game and Mabrey featured in the offense, the shot volume should be there. A motivated scorer facing a former team, in a game her side is expected to lead, is a classic over-the-points-line setup — Mabrey will get the looks, and the matchup against a poor Connecticut defense makes converting them easier.

Isabelle Harrison Over Points + Rebounds — Jevon Jones

Jevon’s Tempo prop is Isabelle Harrison over her combined points and rebounds (line still pending — confirm before placing). Harrison missed Toronto’s first ten games, but in her return she posted 14 points and six rebounds in just 14 minutes — eye-opening production on limited minutes. The key for Jevon is workload and need: Toronto ranked near the bottom of the league, 13th in rebounding, while she was out, so her return directly addresses the team’s biggest weakness. He expects the Tempo to lean on her to shoulder that load, and an expanding role plus an obvious team need is the recipe for a combined-stat prop to clear.

LA Sparks at Seattle Storm

Dearica Hamby Over 22.5 Points + Rebounds (-119) — Stacks (Best Bet)

Stacks’ best bet of the night is Dearica Hamby over 22.5 points plus rebounds. He simply sees a bad matchup for Seattle, with no clear answer for Hamby, and the panel agreed she should have her way in this spot. A combined points-and-rebounds line is a sturdy way to bet a high-usage forward, because it gives two paths to the number — if the shots are not falling, the rebounds still accrue, and vice versa. Against a Seattle front line with no natural matchup for her, Hamby’s volume and versatility make this the panel’s most confident prop, and the room loved it.

Natasha Hiedeman Over 3.5 Assists (-120) — Jevon Jones

Jevon’s Natasha Hiedeman over 3.5 assists fits the game script perfectly. She is already averaging 3.9 assists per game — above the line — and Jevon expects an uptick in a fast-paced Cup game. His core read: the Sparks love to play at a high tempo, and their lone defensive flaw is yielding an unusually high assist rate to opposing guards. Add Hiedeman’s low turnover rate, which keeps her on the floor and in control of the offense, and the play has hit in seven of her last ten games. Jevon is attacking it with confidence.

Awa Fam Over 4.5 Rebounds — Ron Crawford

Ron’s prop is Awa Fam over 4.5 rebounds. He is high on the young big’s future — she was held back while playing in Europe with Spain — and sees a growing presence on the glass. She pulled down four boards in her most recent game, and with the line set at just 4.5, Ron likes her to clear it as her role expands. Young bigs trending toward larger minutes are exactly the profile that beats a modest rebounding line, and Ron expects Fam’s workload to keep climbing.

TWO-THREE ZONE Prop Best Bets

The standout prop from the panel is Stacks’ best bet: Dearica Hamby over 22.5 points plus rebounds. Rounding out the board: Marina Mabrey over 17.5 points, Natasha Hiedeman over 3.5 assists, Awa Fam over 4.5 rebounds, and Isabelle Harrison over points plus rebounds (line pending). The crew noted that best bets have been on fire lately, and this slate leans on clear, repeatable angles: revenge spots, expanding roles, favorable pace, and matchup mismatches.

How to Play WNBA Player Props

Player props reward bettors who think in terms of role, usage, and game script rather than just talent. The strongest props on this card share a theme: each player is positioned for opportunity. Mabrey gets volume in a game Toronto controls, Hamby has two paths to her combined line, Hiedeman benefits from pace and a defensive weakness, and the two role-expansion plays (Harrison and Fam) bet on growing minutes. Identifying the why behind a prop — not just the player’s average — is how sharp prop bettors find value.

Combined Points + Rebounds Lines

Two of the panel’s plays are points-plus-rebounds props, and that structure is worth understanding. A combined line is more stable than a pure points prop because it gives the bettor two ways to reach the number: a scorer who has an off shooting night can still clear the line on the glass, and a forward who is boxed out can still get there with buckets. For high-usage, two-way players like Hamby, that resilience is exactly why the panel favors the combined market over a single-stat line.

Pace and Assist Props

Hiedeman’s assist prop is a pace-and-matchup play, and it illustrates a key prop principle: tempo inflates counting stats. In a fast-paced Cup game against a Sparks team that surrenders a high assist rate to guards, the conditions multiply her opportunities. Pair an above-the-line season average with a favorable matchup and a low turnover rate that keeps her on the floor, and you have the kind of confluence that makes an assist over one of the more reliable prop categories.

Role-Expansion Props

The Harrison and Fam props both bet on expanding roles, which is one of the most profitable angles in player props because the market is slow to adjust lines for a player whose minutes are climbing. Harrison addresses Toronto’s biggest weakness on the glass, and Fam is a young big trending toward bigger workloads. When a team needs what a player provides and the minutes are rising, the counting-stat lines often lag the new reality — exactly the inefficiency these two plays target.

Bankroll and Prop Discipline

Props are best sized smaller than sides and totals because they carry more variance — a single foul-trouble night, a blowout that cuts a star’s minutes, or a cold shooting stretch can sink even a well-reasoned play. Treat the panel’s best bet (Hamby) as the anchor and the rest as smaller positions, avoid parlaying them all into one ticket unless you specifically want the long-shot payout, and always confirm the lines and player availability before placing, especially the pending Harrison number.

Confirm Lines and Availability

WNBA props are especially sensitive to late news. Injury designations, minutes restrictions for returning players like Harrison, and rest decisions can all move or void a prop, and at least one line on this card was still pending at record time. Before placing any of these, verify the current number and confirm the player is active and not on a minutes cap. The reasoning behind each prop holds only if the player sees the expected workload.

Why These Props Have Value

The throughline across the panel’s board is opportunity meeting a soft spot. The crew is uniformly down on Connecticut, which lifts the Toronto players’ props; they see Seattle with no answer for Hamby; and they identify a Sparks defensive flaw that feeds Hiedeman’s assists. Each prop pairs a player positioned for volume with a matchup or pace factor that boosts it. That combination — usage plus a favorable environment — is the foundation of every prop on this slate, and it is why the room had conviction.

The Bottom Line

The TWO-THREE ZONE prop board for Wednesday’s Commissioner’s Cup games is anchored by Stacks’ best bet, Dearica Hamby over 22.5 points plus rebounds, and supported by Mabrey’s revenge points prop, Hiedeman’s pace-driven assists, Fam’s role-expansion rebounds, and Harrison’s combined line. Lead with the Hamby best bet, size the rest as smaller prop positions, confirm every line and the players’ availability before placing, and shop for the best numbers across books.

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Ron Crawford

Ron Crawford began handicapping in 1998 with the emergence of internet-based sports statistical data. Since then, he has developed a proprietary statistical model — Ron Crawford's Spreadsheet — which has been featured on numerous handicapping shows across YouTube. Using this model, Ron has produced positive units in every major sport, including the NHL, MLB, NBA, and collegiate sports, consistently since 2019. While successful across the board, his top-performing sports remain Soccer, NHL and NBA Basketball. If you're looking for a true statistical edge, Ron Crawford delivers.