Women's National Basketball Association

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Women's National Basketball Association
The WNBA logo parallels the NBA logo; red and blue featuring a woman holding a basketball
Sport Basketball
Founded 1996
Inaugural season 1997
No. of teams 14
Country(ies) Flag of the United States United States
Most recent
champion(s)
Phoenix Mercury
TV partner(s) ABC, ESPN, NBA TV
Official website WNBA.com

The Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) is an organization governing a professional basketball league for women in the United States. The league was formed in 1996 as the women's counterpart to the NBA. It features some of the greatest female basketball players in the world and is the longest-running and arguably most successful women’s professional team sports league in United States history. League play started in 1997 and the regular season is played from May to August with the playoffs starting in late August running into September.

Many WNBA teams have NBA counterparts and play in the same arena. The Connecticut Sun are the only team to play without sharing the city with an NBA team, while as of 2008, the Chicago Sky and Houston Comets are the only other teams that do not share an arena with an NBA counterpart. Also, the Atlanta Dream, Chicago Sky, Connecticut Sun, Houston Comets, Los Angeles Sparks, Phoenix Mercury, Seattle Storm and the Washington Mystics are independently owned. Starting with the 2008 season, the Houston Comets will no longer share an arena with their NBA counterpart, and will begin playing all home games at Reliant Arena.

Contents

[edit] Organization

[edit] Regular Season

The league is divided into two conferences. As of the 2008 WNBA season, there are 7 teams in the Eastern Conference and 7 teams in the Western Conference. Each team plays a 34-game regular season schedule, beginning in May and ending in late August. Every team plays four teams in their conference 3 times each and play the remaining 2 teams 4 times apiece (20 games). Then they each play teams from the opposite conference twice (14 games), once on each team's home court. The four teams in each conference with the best Win/Loss records go on to compete in the WNBA Playoffs during September with the WNBA Finals following later in the month.

During the years where the Summer Olympics will be held, the WNBA takes a month off in the middle of their season to allow the players to practice and compete with their respective national teams. During the 2008 season, most of August is being taken off to allow for the 2008 Summer Olympics being held in Beijing, China. The regular season will run from May 17, 2008 to September 14, 2008 (the Olympic break will be from July 28, 2008 to August 27, 2008. The WNBA Playoffs and WNBA Finals will lead into October

WNBA Team Locations      Western Conference      Eastern Conference
WNBA Team Locations      Western Conference      Eastern Conference

[edit] All-Star Game

In the middle of July, regular play stops temporarily for the WNBA All-Star Game. The game is part of a weekend-long event, held in a selected WNBA city each year. The actual game is played on the selected WNBA team's home court. The All-Star Game features star players from the Western Conference facing star players from the Eastern Conference. During the season, fans get to vote for the players they would like to see start the game. The 2006 All-Star Game was the first game to feature custom uniforms that match the decade anniversary logo. Due to the Olympics, there will be no WNBA All-Star Game in 2008; the game will return in 2009.

[edit] WNBA Playoffs Series

The top 4 teams in each conference compete in the WNBA Playoffs after the regular season, usually in August and early September. Each conference has two conference semi-final series, putting the team with the best record in each conference against the team with the 4th best record in the conference. The team with the 3rd best record in each conference faces the team with the 2nd best record in the same conference. The winning teams from each of these series face each other in the conference final, with the winning team in each conference facing the other team in the WNBA Finals.

First and second round playoff games series are best-of-three playoff games series. The first game of the series is played on the home court of the team with the lower seed, while the last two games are played on the home court of the higher ranked team. The WNBA Finals is a best-of-five playoff games series, held in September.

[edit] History

Officially approved by the NBA Board of Governors on April 24, 1996, the creation of the WNBA was announced at a press conference with Rebecca Lobo, Lisa Leslie and Sheryl Swoopes in attendance. While not the first major women's professional basketball league in the United States (a distinction held by the defunct WBL), the WNBA is the only league to receive full backing of the NBA. The WNBA logo, "Logo Woman", paralleled the NBA logo and was selected out of 50 different designs.

[edit] We Got Next

On the heels of a much-publicized gold medal run by the 1996 USA Basketball Women's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympic Games, the WNBA began its first season on June 21, 1997 to little fanfare. The league began with eight teams; the first WNBA game featured the New York Liberty facing the Los Angeles Sparks in Los Angeles. The game was televised nationally in the United States on the NBC television network. At the start of the 1997 season, the WNBA had television deals in place with NBC (NBA rights holder), and the Walt Disney Company and Hearst Corporation joint venture channels, ESPN and Lifetime Television Network, respectively. Penny Toler was the first woman to score a point in the league.

The WNBA centered its marketing campaign, dubbed "We Got Next", around stars Rebecca Lobo, Lisa Leslie and Sheryl Swoopes. In the league's first season, Leslie's Los Angeles Sparks underperformed and Swoopes sat out much of the season due to her pregnancy. The WNBA's true star in 1997 was WNBA MVP Cynthia Cooper, Swoopes' teammate on the Houston Comets. The Comets defeated Lobo's New York Liberty in the first WNBA Championship game.

The initial "We Got Next" advertisement would run following each NBA season until it was replaced with the "We Got Game" campaign.

[edit] Struggle for Relevancy

In 1999, the league's chief competition, the American Basketball League, folded. Many of the ABL's star players, including several Olympic gold medalists (like Nikki McCray and Dawn Staley) and a number of standout college performers (including Kate Starbird and Jennifer Rizzotti), then joined the rosters of WNBA teams and, in so doing, enhanced the overall quality of play in the league. When a lockout resulted in an abbreviated NBA season, the WNBA saw faltering TV viewership.

Four teams were added after the 1997 season, bringing the number of teams in the league up to twelve. The 1999 season began with a collective bargaining agreement between players and the league, marking the first collective bargaining agreement to be signed in the history of women's professional sports.

The WNBA made a huge step on May 23, 2000, when the Houston Comets became the first WNBA team to be invited to the White House Rose Garden.

[edit] Expansion, Contraction, and Relocation

By the 2000 season, the WNBA had doubled in size. Two teams were added in 1998: the Detroit Shock and the Washington Mystics; another two in 1999 (the Minnesota Lynx and the Orlando Miracle); and four more for the 2000 season (the Indiana Fever, the Seattle Storm, the Miami Sol, and the Portland Fire). Teams and the league were collectively owned by the NBA until 2002, when the NBA sold WNBA teams either to their NBA counterparts in the same city or to a third party. This led to two teams moving; Utah to San Antonio and Orlando to Connecticut. With the move the Sun became the first WNBA team to be owned by a third party instead of an NBA franchise. It also led to two teams folding, the Miami Sol and Portland Fire.

In addition to the restructuring of teams, players also caused changes in the league. In 2002, the WNBA Players Association threatened to strike the next season if a new deal was not worked out between players and the league. The result was a delay in the start of the 2003 preseason.

After the 2003 season, the Cleveland Rockers folded because the ownership of that franchise was unwilling to operate the franchise.

The 2004 season proved to be the most competitive in league history, with almost all the teams vying for playoff spots. On October 21, 2004, in the wake of this success, Val Ackerman, the first WNBA president, announced her resignation, effective February 1, 2005, citing the desire to spend more time with her family. Ackerman later became president of USA Basketball.

On February 15, 2005, NBA Commissioner David Stern announced that Donna Orender, who had been serving as the Senior Vice President of the PGA Tour and who had played for several teams in the now-defunct Women's Pro Basketball League, would be Ackerman's successor as of April 2005.

The WNBA awarded its first expansion team in several years to Chicago (later named the Sky) in February 2005. In the off-season, a set of rule changes was approved that made the WNBA more like the NBA.

The 2007 season was the WNBA's 11th; in 2006 the league became the first team-oriented women's professional sports league to exist for ten consecutive seasons. On the occasion of the tenth anniversary, the WNBA released its All-Decade Team, comprising the ten WNBA players deemed to have contributed, through on-court play and off-court activities, the most to women's basketball during the period of the league's existence.

In December of 2006, the Charlotte Bobcats organization announced it would no longer operate the Charlotte Sting. Soon after, the WNBA announced that the Charlotte Sting would not operate for the upcoming season. A dispersal draft was held January 8, 2007, with all players except for unrestricted free agents Allison Feaster and Tammy Sutton-Brown available for selection. Teams selected in inverse order of their 2006 records; Chicago received the first pick and selected Monique Currie.

In October of 2007 the WNBA awarded another expansion franchise to Atlanta. Atlanta businessman Ron Terwilliger will be the owner of the new team, nicknamed the Dream. The Dream played their first regular season game on May 17, which was a 100-67[1] loss to the Connecticut Sun.

[edit] Rules

Rules are governed by standard basketball rules as defined by the NBA, with a few notable exceptions:

  • The three-point line is 20 feet and 6.25 inches (6.25 m) from the middle of the basket, in line with FIBA regulations.
  • The regulation WNBA ball is a minimum 28.5 inches (72.4 cm) in circumference, 1.00 inch (2.54 cm) smaller than the NBA ball. As of 2004, this size is used for all senior-level women's competitions worldwide.
  • There is no block/charge arc under the basket.
  • Quarters are 10 minutes in duration instead of 12.

Starting with the 2006 WNBA season, all games are divided into four 10-minute quarters as opposed to the league's original two 20-minute halves of play, as to fit with international procedures (many WNBA players play in Europe or Australia in the Northern Hemisphere autumn and winter). The NBA rule on jump balls is used for determining possession for the second, third, and fourth periods (i.e. team winning tip is awarded the ball at the beginning of the fourth quarter; the other team gets it to start the second and third periods). Under the two-half format both periods started with jump balls, presumably to prevent teams from purposely losing the opening tip in order to get the ball first in the second half. With the four quarters format this is not a problem because the team that wins the tip gets the ball first in the final period.

Also in 2006, the shot clock was decreased from 30 to 24 seconds and the league began adopting NBA rules (14 second reset on any defensive foul if less than such time remains when a foul is called). The rule changes signaled a move away from rules more similar to those of college basketball and toward those that provide a more NBA-like game.

In 2007, the rules were changed again; the amount of time that a team must move the ball across the half-court line went from 10 to 8 seconds. In addition, a referee can grant time-outs to either a player or the coach, as in the NBA.

[edit] Teams

There have been a total of 18 teams in WNBA history. A total of 4 teams have folded: the Cleveland Rockers, the Miami Sol, the Charlotte Sting and the Portland Fire. Two other teams, the Utah Starzz and the Orlando Miracle moved, to San Antonio (Silver Stars) and Uncasville, Connecticut (Sun) respectively. Most team names are also very similar to those of NBA teams in the same market, such as the Washington Wizards and Washington Mystics, the Sacramento Kings and Sacramento Monarchs, the Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury, the Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Lynx, and the Houston Rockets and Houston Comets (and before the women's team folded and the men's team relocated, Charlotte Hornets and Charlotte Sting).

[edit] Eastern Conference

Team Colors Arena Founded
Atlanta Dream Sky Blue, Red, White Philips Arena 2008
Chicago Sky Sky Blue, Gold UIC Pavilion 2006
Connecticut Sun Navy Blue, Red, Gold Mohegan Sun Arena 1999
Detroit Shock Blue, Red, Navy Blue The Palace of Auburn Hills 1998
Indiana Fever Navy Blue, Gold, Red Conseco Fieldhouse 2000
New York Liberty Blue, Liberty Green, Orange Madison Square Garden 1997
Washington Mystics Blue, Black, Bronze Verizon Center 1998

[edit] Western Conference

Team Colors Arena Founded
Houston Comets Red, Navy Blue, Silver Reliant Arena 1997
Los Angeles Sparks Purple, Gold Staples Center 1997
Minnesota Lynx Blue, Green, Silver Target Center 1999
Phoenix Mercury Purple, Red, Chartreuse US Airways Center 1997
Sacramento Monarchs Purple, Red, Silver ARCO Arena 1997
San Antonio Silver Stars Black, Silver AT&T Center 1997
Seattle Storm Green, Red, Gold KeyArena 2000

[edit] Former Teams

[edit] Future Teams

In 2007, investors took steps to recreate the Colorado Chill, a previously successful franchise in the now-defunct NWBL, as a WNBA expansion team, but in September, Chill backers announced that they had not raised enough money to join the WNBA in 2008.

Now Norm Freedman, whose history with basketball dates back some 35 years, is heading a group of investors interested in bringing a WNBA franchise to play out of the Ricoh Coliseum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

"The prospects are better than 50%, Freedman said. "The WNBA is quite positive, and so am I, that a team in Toronto will do well. [1]

[edit] Business

[edit] WNBA Presidents

[edit] Finance

So far the WNBA has not mirrored the monetary success of the NBA, though it is targeting profitability in 2007. The NBA has provided annual subsidies of approximately $12 million dollars to cover operating losses. The average attendance of WNBA games, league-wide, is roughly half the average attendance of NBA games. As of the agreement signed in 2003, WNBA players who had up to three years of experience were capped at $42,000. By comparison, $385,277 was the minimum salary of an NBA rookie. WNBA rookies earned $30,000 per year. The maximum salary for a WNBA player in 2007 was $100,000. Many WNBA players choose to supplement their salaries by playing in European or Australian women's basketball leagues during the WNBA off-season.

[edit] 2007 Team by Team Attendance

Team 2007 Attendance Avg. Arena
Chicago Sky 3,710+ UIC Pavilion
Connecticut Sun 7,970+ Mohegan Sun Arena
Detroit Shock 9,749+ The Palace of Auburn Hills
Houston Comets 8,166+ Toyota Center
Indiana Fever 7,227+ Conseco Fieldhouse
Los Angeles Sparks 8,695+ STAPLES Center
Minnesota Lynx 6,971+ Target Center
New York Liberty 8,698- Madison Square Garden
Phoenix Mercury 7,711+ US Airways Center
Sacramento Monarchs 8,413- ARCO Arena
San Antonio Silver Stars 7,569+ AT&T Center
Seattle Storm 7,974- KeyArena
Washington Mystics 7,788- Verizon Center
  • WNBA Average: 7,742+

+/- Increase or Decrease over last season

[edit] Media Coverage

As of 2007, WNBA games are televised throughout the U.S. by ABC, ESPN and NBA TV, though ratings are extremely low for televised broadcasts. In the early years two women's-oriented networks, Lifetime and Oxygen, also broadcast games including the first game of the WNBA. NBC showed games from 1997 to 2002 as part of its larger contract with the NBA before losing those rights to ABC. WNBA games are also seen in multiple countries around the world.

Starting in the 2009 season, the league will enter a broadcast agreement with ABC/ESPN. The financial terms of the deal, which runs through the 2016 season, were not disclosed.

Many teams have local telecasts, and all games are also on local radio and Sirius Satellite Radio.

[edit] Champions

For more details on this topic, see WNBA Finals.
Season Winner Series Runner-Up
1997 Houston Comets 1-0 New York Liberty
1998 Houston Comets 2-1 Phoenix Mercury
1999 Houston Comets 2-1 New York Liberty
2000 Houston Comets 2-0 New York Liberty
2001 Los Angeles Sparks 2-0 Charlotte Sting
2002 Los Angeles Sparks 2-0 New York Liberty
2003 Detroit Shock 2-1 Los Angeles Sparks
2004 Seattle Storm 2-1 Connecticut Sun
2005 Sacramento Monarchs 3-1 Connecticut Sun
2006 Detroit Shock 3-2 Sacramento Monarchs
2007 Phoenix Mercury 3-2 Detroit Shock

[edit] Players and coaches

For more details on this topic, see List of WNBA players.

A decade after the launch of the WNBA, in 2006 only 7 players remain from the original 1997 WNBA Draft: Tamecka Dixon, Vickie Johnson, Lisa Leslie, Mwadi Mabika, Wendy Palmer-Daniel, Sheryl Swoopes and Tina Thompson. Only three of these players remain on the same teams that they were selected by in the 1997 WNBA Draft: Leslie and Mabika with the Los Angeles Sparks, and Thompson with the Houston Comets.

Each April, the WNBA holds the WNBA Draft in the city that hosted NCAA Women's Final Four.

In 2007 Paul Westhead of the Phoenix Mercury became the first person to earn both NBA and WNBA championship rings as a coach.

[edit] WNBA Awards

After the end of the regular season, these league awards are awarded to both coaches and players:

[edit] 2007 Winners

Award Winner Team
WNBA Finals MVP Award Cappie Pondexter Phoenix Mercury
WNBA Most Valuable Player Award Lauren Jackson Seattle Storm
WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award Lauren Jackson Seattle Storm
WNBA Most Improved Player Award Janel McCarville New York Liberty
WNBA Peak Performer Lauren Jackson Seattle Storm
WNBA Peak Performer Becky Hammon San Antonio Silver Stars
WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year Award Plenette Pierson Detroit Shock
WNBA Rookie of the Year Award Armintie Price Chicago Sky
Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award Tully Bevilaqua Indiana Fever
WNBA Coach of the Year Award Dan Hughes San Antonio Silver Stars

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ TorontoSun.com - Basketball - WNBA coming north?

[edit] External links

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