Watch: Paige Bueckers Reveals What Drives Her Toward WNBA Greatness (Exclusive)
When the plan to launch the WNBA was finalized in 1996, it was nothing short of “revolutionary.”
“We looked at the history, at other women’s leagues,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver recalled to ESPN The Magazine in 2016. “There had been attempts. But there was not a tradition of success. We were trying to buck historical trends.”
Added former commissioner David Stern, “We thought it was an ultimate winner. But we knew it was going to be a long haul.”
So yes, the Women’s Professional Basketball League received a key assist from the stratospheric success of the men’s sport. But the idea was a slam dunk no matter who ultimately sank the shot.
Enter future legends Sheryl Swoopes (the first player signed to the WNBA), Rebecca Lobo, Lisa Leslie and their pioneering ilk, and the rest is history.
“The WNBA, when I first heard about it,” Lobo told ESPN, “meant a dream being realized.”
Now buoyed by the star power of Angel Reese, Caitlin Clark, A’ja Wilson, Paige Bueckers, Sabrina Ionescu and many more, the league is still growing—and therefore has growing pains—but the WNBA enjoys a loyal, enthusiastic and ever-expanding fan base.
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“Being on the magnitude it is,” Clark—destined to be the league’s top draw after she was drafted No. 1 by the Indiana Fever in 2024—told CNN Sports last year of the reception the team was getting everywhere they played, “is kind of hard to imagine.”
Added Fever point guard Kelsey Mitchell, “The media, the constant eyes, some of the eyes you least expect. I’ve been in the league a while, so this is kind of new for me. I knew it would get here eventually. I didn’t expect the impact, but it’s such a positive and beautiful way.”
Small forward Leslie Hull admitted she expected her playing career to end after she graduated from Stanford in 2022.
But the WNBA has become “a real option for girls, they can have these dreams in first and second grade, being a basketball player is now a legitimate goal to have,” she said. “I just can’t imagine what the sport is going to look like when players have been playing with that goal in mind for 15 years.”
Before the shot clock resumes with the start of the league’s 30th season May 8, we’ve got a bucketful of secrets about the WNBA that’ll have you laying up points wherever you go:
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