Nyara Sabally came into Saturday carrying momentum, and the Toronto Tempo came in with it. After Sabally scored 29 points in a 111-104 win over the Sky, Toronto was set to host the Seattle Storm on May 30, 2026, in a matchup that gave fans a clear next stop on the WNBA calendar.
The game tipped off at 1 p.m. ET, a noon-hour start that made Storm vs Toronto Tempo an easy one to find for viewers in both markets. The matchup was available on CW Seattle, KOMO 4, TSN and Amazon Prime Video, giving the game a broad broadcast footprint for a meeting between two teams trying to steady themselves early in the season.
That record line gives the game its edge. Toronto entered at 4-4, while Seattle arrived at 3-5, so this was not just another date on the schedule. It was a chance for the Tempo to defend home court against a Storm team trying to climb back toward even, with both sides knowing the standings would feel the result immediately.
Sabally’s 29-point outing is part of why Toronto could draw attention heading into this one. She had just delivered the kind of scoring burst that can change how an opponent prepares, even if the Tempo’s next task was simply to carry that form into a home game against Seattle.
The broader guide around the matchup also pointed fans toward betting, ticketing and streaming links provided by partners, with restrictions potentially applying. But the only thing locked in on the board was the game itself: Toronto at home, Seattle on the road, and a 1 p.m. ET tip waiting on Saturday.
For a game with multiple ways to watch, the next move was straightforward. The Storm and the Tempo would settle it on the floor at 1 p.m. ET, and Toronto’s 4-4 start met Seattle’s 3-5 record with Sabally’s latest scoring outburst still fresh in the background.

