Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The NBA All-Star Celebrity Game is an annual exhibition basketball game held by the National Basketball Association that takes place during the NBA All-Star Weekend and features retired NBA players, WNBA players, actors, musicians and athletes from sports other than basketball. The game was first held during the 2002–03 season as part of the ...
The 2022 WNBA season was the 26th season of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The Chicago Sky were the defending champions. The WNBA's second Commissioner's Cup took place during the regular season, with the Las Vegas Aces winning over the Sky. [ 3] In the playoffs, the Aces were the first seed and won the Finals over the ...
On March 28, 2013, ESPN and the WNBA announced they had extended their agreement through 2022. [4] Under the agreement, there will be up to 30 games a year televised on ABC, ESPN or ESPN2 each season, including the Finals.
Also on Sunday, the Mercury host the Sky at 9 p.m. ET. Caitlin Clark scored 29 points with 10 assists as the Indiana Fever resumed the WNBA season with a 98–89 win over the Phoenix Mercury.
The ESPN family of networks will air 25 regular season games during the 2022 WNBA season and a record-tying nine of them will air on ABC, the league announced in March. The nine nationally aired ...
The current format was adopted in 2022 and features the top 8 teams (regardless of conference) playing in a three round series for the championship, the first round is a best-of-three series and features all 8 playoff teams seeded by record, while the Semifnals and Finals remained the same with a best-of-five game series.
3,234 – Sue Bird, Seattle 2002–2022 (did not play in 2013 or 2019) 2,701 – Courtney Vandersloot, Chicago 2011–2022, New York 2023–present; 2,599 – Ticha Penicheiro, Sacramento 1998–2009, Los Angeles 2010–2011, Chicago 2012; Highest assists per game average, career (Min. 100 games)
The 2011 WNBA Finals was the first coached by two women. In 2014, the Chicago Sky became the first team to appear in the WNBA Finals with a sub-.500 record. In 2016, the Los Angeles Sparks won by one point despite a later announcement by the WNBA that officials missed an earlier shot-clock violation at 1:14, which should not have counted. [1]