WNBA, Caitlin Clark
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In the past decade, women’s basketball has become easier to find and watch. WNBA matches used to be broadcast sporadically, on obscure channels and at random times of the day. In 2015 ESPN televised only 11 games in the season. “You had to guess when it would be on,” remembers David Berri of Southern Utah University.
After a long but fascinating winter, spring has arrived, and with it a new WNBA season. The 2025 campaign, which features a record 44 regular season games per team, will begin Friday. From there, it will be a five-month sprint to crown a new champion.
From MVP picks to future stars, the UConn Huskies' impact is felt at every level of the WNBA, with former stars dominating the WNBA GM Survey.
The Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) today launched “No Space for Hate,” a multi-dimensional platform designed to combat hate and promote respect across all WNBA spaces — from online discourse to in-arena behavior.
Wilson (+225) is second in odds to repeat as MVP behind Caitlyn Clark (+220), while Wilson is the favorite for Defensive Player of the Year (+130) ahead of Collier (+320), then there is a wide gap between the competition. For Rookie of the Year, much like last year, this season could be a runaway with Paige Bueckers as a -370 favorite.
The WNBA has experienced exponential growth over the last year raising both viewership and ticket pricing. We talked to OG fans about the changes.
There are no shortages of challengers to the reigning WNBA champion New York Liberty or star power across the league.