Ross joined the
Atlanta Dream as an assistant coach in 2009. The Dream enjoyed a 14-game turnaround from its inaugural WNBA season in 2008, and tied for second place in the WNBA Eastern Conference. The Dream posted 21–13 records in 2010 and 2011, and tying for first place in the Eastern Conference in 2011 on the way to a second consecutive appearance in the WNBA Finals. Following the 2011 season, the
Los Angeles Sparks hired Ross to be their new head coach. In 2012, her first season as a WNBA head coach, Ross pushed the Sparks to a 24–10 record and a second-place finish in the WNBA Western Conference. In the 2012 WNBA playoffs, Ross's Sparks swept the
San Antonio Silver Stars in two games in the Western Conference semifinals, before losing to the
Minnesota Lynx in two games in the conference finals. After the 2012 season, Ross was honored as the
WNBA Coach of the Year Award. In her follow-up season in 2013, the Sparks posted an identical record of 24–10 and again finished second in the Western Conference. The Sparks lost to the
Phoenix Mercury, two games to one, in the Western Conference semifinals of the 2013 WNBA playoffs. Despite having compiled an overall winning record of 24–10 in each of her first two seasons as head coach, Ross was fired by the Sparks management in the midst of the 2014 season when the team had posted a 10–12 record (3–7 at home), with twelve games remaining. Sparks general manager and executive vice president
Penny Toler was named as the team's interim head coach. In 2012 and 2013, the Sparks had the third-best and second-best regular season records, respectively, in the twelve-team WNBA. == References ==