LAS VEGAS -- Some fans held signs around Michelob Ultra Arena that read, "Once an Ace, always an Ace," to welcome back Kelsey Plum.
They cheered when minutes before Friday night's game Plum was shown on the videoboard. She smiled as the roars began and then hugged former teammate A'ja Wilson.
Plum made her first appearance in Las Vegas since being sent to Los Angeles in a three-team trade in which the Aces landed Jewell Loyd from Seattle.
"It's going to be great to compete against them," Plum said before the game. "I've been on their team for so long. I feel like we know each other so well. It's really going to be a battle of the minds."
It wasn't quite the return Plum envisioned.
The Aces beat the Sparks 96-81, and Plum finished with a team-high 17 points on 6-of-19 shooting. She was 1-of-7 from 3-point range, committed five turnovers and four fouls, and finished with a minus-21 rating.
Plum went flying in the second quarter and a foul was initially called on Las Vegas' Jackie Young, but the Aces challenged the call, which was reversed when the replay showed Plum wasn't pushed. She picked up a technical foul late in the third quarter after arguing a call.
She pointed out the Sparks were playing their seventh game since May 16 and the Aces hadn't hit the court since Sunday.
"I was frustrated in myself," Plum said after the game. "I didn't have any legs. They did a great job defensively."
Plum was an instrumental part of the 2022 and 2023 Aces teams that won WNBA championships, the first team to repeat since the Sparks went back-to-back in 2001 and 2002.
She was an All-Star the past three seasons, but the Aces are Wilson's team. As great as Plum was in Las Vegas, she was never going to get out of that shadow as long as the three-time league MVP remained on the roster.
In Los Angeles, Plum is, as Sparks coach Lynne Roberts called her, "the head of the snake." She is averaging 24 points per game, behind only Minnesota's Napheesa Collier's 26.8.
Plum, however, took exception that she is the face of the franchise.
"People get caught up in the 'face of,'" Plum said. "That was not my intention. I think for me in L.A., it was more going for a fresh start and an opportunity to be able to do it in a different way and have the ball in my hands a little bit more. I'm a dynamic player. I make plays. I can pass. I can score. So I just wanted a little bit more opportunity to do that.
"I'm trying to win games and affect winning. We've still got to do that at a high level, so that's really where my focus is on more than anything."
The Sparks are counting on her championship experience to help them back to that level. They are 2-5 and haven't finished with a winning record since going 15-7 in the COVID-shortened 2020 season.
"She's won everywhere she's been," Roberts said. "She was a key part of Vegas, their success. ... She's ready for that point in her career, and she's earned it."
The more immediate priority for Plum was beating her old club, saying the teams that are separated by just a four-hour drive was not a rivalry -- yet.
"They've kicked our [butt]," Plum said. "We'd need to win at least six or seven more matchups, respectfully, for it to be a rivalry. It's like the Giants and the Jets."