Sabrina Ionescu is a couple months away from tying the knot with Las Vegas Raiders offensive lineman Hroniss Grasu and she has yet to do any wedding planning.
Most brides-to-be would be hitting the panic button, but not Ionescu.
The New York Liberty All-Star guard — the No. 1 pick overall in the 2020 WNBA Draft — was cool and calm while discussing her impending nuptials in an exclusive interview with The Post.
‘Well, um, I haven’t don’t any yet,” Ionescu said about wedding planning. “I’d say we’re both a little busy. I’m a little bit of a procrastinator, so that there’s that.”
Busy is an understatement.
Ionescu, whose signature Sabrina 1 unisex shoe with Nike released in September, has her sights set on helping the Liberty hang its first-ever franchise championship banner.
The Liberty begin their playoff push with a first-round best-of-three series against the Washington Mystics on Friday.
As for Grasu?
The former third-round pick (Chicago Bears, 2015) — a 6-foot-3, 300-pound center — signed with the Raiders practice squad on Sept. 4 for his seventh NFL season.
With such busy schedules, devotion to their respective crafts and navigating long distance, some would question why take on wedding planning.
“So, it was just [timing],” Ionescu told The Post ahead of her newly-created SI20 Foundation inaugural basketball clinic for the students at DREAM on September 9. “It had to be within our off-seasons.
“We have an idea of what we want and how everything should look and what we’ll need. It’s still a couple months away and we’ll get everything rolling, but I haven’t had too much time to devote to that side of it just yet.”
Although Ionescu couldn’t divulge too much, the couple has set a wedding date.
“The wedding will happen in the offseason,” she said. “So at least that’s good. My fiancé plays football so we don’t have a whole lot of time where we’re both off.”
The Oregon alum, who has a part-time role as the director of athletic culture for the Ducks’ women’s basketball team, admitted that she is more likely to be a bridezilla than Grasu.
“It would probably be me over him,” she said, laughing. “He’s very gonna-go-with-the-flow. Yeah, he’s very go-with-the-flow. But, he’s very on top of it as well.”
The WNBA star is looking forward to her happily ever after with Grasu, who proposed in January, on a rooftop with candles and a floral heart arrangement.
“I’m excited, she gushed. “That’s obviously gonna be one of the greatest days of my life, and hopefully winning a championship will be up there in this year as well.
“I’m excited about what I’m doing off the court as well, and building a family in that category is just as important, so I’m looking forward to that as well.”
Ionescu first shared that she and Grasu were tying the knot in a few months during an appearance on CBS Mornings on Aug. 30.
“It’s a great love story — a little Oregon Ducks love story,” she said at the time. “He played football at the University of Oregon. He’s a little older than me but we met as alumni from there and we’re now getting married in a couple of months.”
Ionescu is focused on getting a different type of ring after the Liberty assembled a Big 3 in the offseason.
The Liberty acquired former MVP Jonquel Jones in a three-team trade in January, while carving out enough cap space to make a max offer to another superstar, Breanna Stewart — the former MVP who hails from Syracuse.
New York Liberty general manager Jonathan Kolb put together a championship-contending roster and was rewarded with being named 2023 WNBA Executive of the Year on Thursday.
“Everyone has made a sacrifice and commitment to be a part of this team, and this team is completely different than last year’s team,” Ionescu told The Post.
“Everyone’s had to commit to one another — committing to their role and wanting to make this thing work. It’s a testament to who we are as basketball. players, but also as people, and wanting to sacrifice and help the person next to us for the betterment of the team.”
This past offseason was the first time Ionescu didn’t have to rehab an injury.
At the start of the season, Ionescu said in a separate interview with The Post, that she felt the most healthy and energized since she joined the Liberty as the No. 1 pick in the 2020 draft.
That foreshadowed a stellar season from the Liberty, who went 8-2 over the last 10 games of the regular season to end up with the No. 2 seed in the playoffs.
Ionescu won the 2023 WNBA Three-Point Contest with a record-setting score of 37 points in July, then returned to the Liberty to resume her regular-season domination.
Their 32-8 record marks their best winning percentage in franchise history (.800).
“It’s been really nice to see us peak at the right time and figure out our style of play,” Ionescu continued. “Obviously the beginning was good, but it was a little rocky with just having to figure out how to play together and build chemistry.
“Now, we’re at the point where everyone is just rolling and we’re excited to go into the playoffs on a high note and are looking to win a championship knowing it’s not gonna be easy — but understanding that if we want to, we can do anything we want to achieve.”
The Liberty are widely predicted to face the top-seeded Las Vegas Aces — a fellow superteam with an All-Star roster led by A’ja Wilson, Candace Parker, Kelsey Plum and Chelsea Gray — in the WNBA Finals.
The third-ranked Connecticut Sun, led by MVP candidate Alyssa Thomas, are also in the race after falling to the Aces in last year’s Finals.