October 15, 2024
Read in Browser [[link removed]]
POWERED BY
The WNBA shattered record after record in a 2024 season headlined by the arrival of Caitlin Clark. The league has a new media-rights deal, a legion of fresh fans, and expansion targets on the horizon. We look at how it plans to build on its momentum and sustain this year’s growth.
— Eric Fisher [[link removed]], David Rumsey [[link removed]], and Colin Salao [[link removed]]
How WNBA Is Preparing to Build on Historic 2024 Season [[link removed]]
Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
The WNBA’s breakthrough 2024 season isn’t quite over yet, but the league is already preparing for an encore that is aimed at reaching even greater heights.
This season for the women’s basketball league, of course, was a deeply transformative one that included record attendance [[link removed]], a bevy of viewership milestones [[link removed]], the Caitlin Clark phenomenon becoming a national frenzy, [[link removed]] and announcements of forthcoming teams in Toronto [[link removed]] and Portland [[link removed]].
As the WNBA Finals between the New York Liberty and Minnesota Lynx are set for Game 3 on Wednesday, the league is actively working on several major initiatives for the 2025 season. Among them:
Expansion: The Golden State Valkyries will start play next year [[link removed]], while the previously announced Toronto and Portland franchises will join the league by 2026. A 16th team could join the league in 2027. As planning for the confirmed franchises and consideration of other candidates continues, the league is spoiled for choice among potential markets [[link removed]]. A longer regular season: The 2025 campaign will increase from 40 regular-season games per team to 44. That will help extend the overall season slightly deeper into October. Adjusted playoff format: The WNBA Finals beginning next year will expand from a best-of-five to a best-of-seven [[link removed]], while home court placements will also change for the first round. The availability of charter flights [[link removed]] across the entire season and rising interest in WNBA games have helped fuel these changes.
“Honestly, the league’s growth and increased demand for WNBA basketball made this the ideal time to expand the schedule, lengthen the Finals, and provide more opportunities to see the best players in the world compete at the highest level,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said last week as the Finals began.
TV Talk
The league’s new TV deals [[link removed]], part of a comparison set of agreements for the NBA, will not begin until 2026. But those pacts are set to provide $2.2 billion over 11 years, and there will be an opportunity after three years to revisit the rights and see where they match up with the league’s growth. Next year, the WNBA will be preparing for the first of the new deals with ESPN, NBC Sports, and Amazon.
At the Finals, Engelbert called the deals “groundbreaking” and highlighted their ability to “grow the economics of the league and expand the reach and accessibility of our game for our fans, with additional WNBA media deals to come.”
WNBA Postseason Ratings Still Surging Post–Caitlin Clark [[link removed]]
Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
The WNBA Finals should have enough drama on the court to make this the league’s most-watched championship round since moving to the best-of-five game format in 2005.
The New York Liberty and Minnesota Lynx are deadlocked at one game apiece, with the Finals shifting to Minnesota for the next two games Wednesday and Friday. A winner-take-all Game 5 would be played back in New York on Sunday.
Last Thursday’s opener was the first WNBA Finals Game 1 in history to surpass one million viewers, with the audience on ESPN coming in at 1.14 million. Ratings for Sunday’s Game 2 on ABC—one of many playoff matchups scheduled head-to-head against NFL action [[link removed]]—have not been released.
The mark to beat is 728,000, which was the average across the 2023 WNBA Finals, as the Las Vegas Aces defeated the Liberty three games to one to win their second consecutive title. That figure is No. 8 all time [[link removed]], behind six best-of-three series in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and the inaugural one-game championship round in 1997. Next year, the WNBA Finals will expand to a best-of-seven format [[link removed]].
Caitlin Clark Effect Lingers
Despite an early first-round exit from ratings magnet Caitlin Clark [[link removed]] and the Indiana Fever, the WNBA playoffs still had serious momentum entering the Finals as the league’s most-viewed postseason in 25 years, with games averaging 970,000 viewers. That number was up 142% from 470,000 in 2023, which was the most-watched WNBA playoffs in 16 years.
This year’s semifinals alone were already higher than last year’s WNBA Finals, averaging 850,000 viewers across nine games.
SPONSORED BY U.S. BANK
Off the Court With Napheesa Collier
Behind every great athlete is a dedicated team that turns personal aspirations into collective triumphs. From coaches and mentors to family and friends, this support system plays a crucial role in an athlete’s success. That’s the power of us [[link removed]].
Since winning the 2019 Rookie of the Year, Napheesa Collier has gained invaluable life and financial wisdom. In just a few short years, Phee has navigated several major milestones: winning multiple gold medals, getting married, signing a three-year pro contract, becoming a mother, playing overseas, and launching a new business venture. Through it all, her family has been a steadfast support system, guiding her to success on and off the court.
Learn more about Napheesa’s Untold Team [[link removed]].
WNBA Eyes 16th Team by 2028: Engelbert Evaluates Candidates [[link removed]]
Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Despite announcing three expansion teams since last September, commissioner Cathy Engelbert has stated the WNBA wants to add one more by 2028—a 16th franchise that would tie the record high the league had from 2000 to 2002.
At a press conference last Thursday [[link removed]], Engelbert said there are about “10 to 12 cities” that the league is evaluating for an expansion franchise.
She added that the league is in “no rush” to add another team due to the three new additions, though the goal would be for the 16th franchise to join the league by 2027 and no later than 2028.
What Are the Options?
Engelbert has mentioned several candidates in the past [[link removed]] for a potential expansion team, including Philadelphia, Nashville, Denver, and somewhere in South Florida.
Last month, Philadelphia mayor Cherelle Parker, during a public plan to discuss a potential downtown arena for the 76ers [[link removed]], announced the franchise is “expected to submit a bid” for a WNBA expansion team [[link removed]]. Engelbert repeated Thursday that Philadelphia is “on the list” of expansion candidates.
Jacksonville, Orlando, and Miami may also explore bids [[link removed]], Sports Business Journal reported last month. Former WNBA president Donna Orender is part of an investment group looking interested in a bid for Jacksonville. The front office of the NBA’s Magic is also reportedly “studying” a potential team in Orlando.
Both Orlando and Miami had WNBA franchises in the early 2000s. The Miami Sol lasted just three years in the league, folding in 2002, while the Orlando Miracle relocated to Connecticut in 2003 and became the Sun.
According to Engelbert, the winning bid will have the same qualities as the other three expansion franchises, with an emphasis on the arena and practice facility.
“It’s all the same types of things I’ve been talking about for the other three around [the] arena, practice facility, player experience, committed long-term ownership group, city, demographics, psychographics, Fortune 500 companies based there,” Engelbert said.
Known Expansion Teams
There will be 13 teams starting next season as the Golden State Valkyries, who are still without any players [[link removed]], but named former Las Vegas Aces assistant Natalie Nakase their head coach last week [[link removed]], will join the fray.
Golden State is owned by Joe Lacob and Peter Guber, who also run the NBA’s Warriors and reportedly paid an expansion fee of $50 million. The two Golden State teams will share the Chase Center in San Francisco.
Earlier this year, teams in Toronto and Portland were announced, with both set to join by 2026.
The Toronto team will be owned by Kilmer Sports Ventures, led by Toronto-based billionaire Larry Tanenbaum [[link removed]]. Unlike Tanenbaum’s involvement with Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment—which owns the NBA’s Raptors, NHL’s Maple Leafs, and MLS’s Toronto FC—this team is not under the MLSE umbrella. The reported $115 million price tag for the franchise includes both the expansion fee and the cost of a new practice facility.
Portland’s WNBA team will not share the same owners as the Trail Blazers, its NBA counterpart, but the ownership group still has ties to both the NBA and local sports. The Bhathal family, owners of the NWSL’s Portland Thorns and co-owners of the NBA’s Kings, were awarded the franchise in September. It’s unclear how much they shelled out for the team.
LOUD AND CLEAR Starting With a Bang
FOS illustration
“It’s a huge advantage.”
—Newly named Golden State Valkyries head coach Natalie Nakase, on the WNBA expansion team having its own practice facility when it enters the league next season. The Valkyries are under the same ownership group as the NBA’s Warriors, and will also play at Chase Center in downtown San Francisco. “We have so many things that are already, I would say, upgraded from other teams,” Nakase said on a recent episode of The FOS Interview.
Watch the full conversation [[link removed]] with FOS reporter Colin Salao.
You can also catch up on our other interviews with important people across the WNBA. Among them:
N.Y. Liberty CEO Keia Clarke talked about the league’s new media deal [[link removed]]. Chicago Sky governor Nadia Rawlinson discussed her team’s $38 million practice facility [[link removed]]. Atlanta Dream SVP Dan Gadd elaborated on an incredible 2024 season [[link removed]] and how teams are seizing the moment. FRONT OFFICE SPORTS TODAY Haason Reddick’s Holdout Continues With Top NFL Agent
FOS illustration
Haason Reddick was let go by agency CAA Sports amid his holdout with the New York Jets. Now, Reddick has a new representative negotiating his status with the team—NFL agent Drew Rosenhaus. Front Office Sports reporter Alex Schiffer joins the show to discuss why CAA Sports moved on from Reddick and whether Rosenhaus can find a light at the end of this tunnel.
Plus, the NHL’s season is firmly underway with its newest team, the Utah Hockey Club, off to a red-hot start. ESPN hockey reporter Emily Kaplan breaks down the hype around Utah HC and what to expect from the league as the season progresses.
Finally, the Texans are off to a blazing 5–1 start this season. Defensive end Will Anderson Jr. explains why he thinks Houston is playing so well early, what it was like transitioning from Alabama to the NFL, and his thoughts on the NFL’s new rule changes.
Watch, listen, and subscribe on Apple [[link removed]], Spotify [[link removed]], and YouTube [[link removed]].
SPONSORED BY U.S. BANK
Bank Smarter. Live Bigger.
U.S. Bank has been making greatness happen since 1863. But not alone. We know above all else that there’s nothing we can’t do together. From buying a home to kick-starting a career, U.S. Bank [[link removed]] is there to support you every step of the way.
We’re dedicated to powering your financial future and, as a result, our collective future. We’ve been doing it since the beginning and are committed to continuing this legacy, and yours.
That’s the power of us [[link removed]].
Conversation Starters Super Bowl host cities are set for the next several years, but an edition of the Big Game could one day take place outside the U.S. [[link removed]] Barcelona revealed a new look at $1.6 billion of future upgrades coming to iconic Camp Nou. Take a look [[link removed]]. MLB’s top-three spending teams this season are among the final four clubs [[link removed]] vying for the World Series. More on the WNBA Caitlin Clark Takes Her Game to the Greens: WNBA Star in LPGA Pro-Am [[link removed]]by David Rumsey [[link removed]]The hoops sensation is scheduled to play in a pro-am on the LPGA Tour. Aces’ Failed Three-Peat Bid Caps Team’s Chaotic WNBA Season [[link removed]]by Colin Salao [[link removed]]Las Vegas had won back-to-back championships under head coach Becky Hammon. WNBA Finals Feature a Tale of Two Differing Success Stories [[link removed]]by Colin Salao [[link removed]]Joe and Clara Wu Tsai purchased the Liberty in 2019. Question of the Day
There are currently 12 WNBA teams, with the Valkyries joining next season, then Toronto and Portland in 2026. How many will there be by 2028?
15 [[link removed]] 16 [[link removed]] 17 [[link removed]] 18 OR MORE [[link removed]]
Monday’s result: 82% of respondents do not think the NFL should award Super Bowl hosting duties to an international venue.
Advertise [[link removed]] Awards [[link removed]] Learning [[link removed]] Events [[link removed]] Video [[link removed]] Podcast [[link removed]] Written by Eric Fisher [[link removed]], David Rumsey [[link removed]], Colin Salao [[link removed]] Edited by Matthew Tabeek [[link removed]], Or Moyal [[link removed]], Catherine Chen [[link removed]]
If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here [[link removed]].
Update your preferences [link removed] / Unsubscribe [link removed]
Copyright © 2024 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016