Caitlin Clark, Indiana Fever and WNBA
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Now, members of the Boston City Council are adding their voices to the many that are advocating for a WNBA team in Boston. Councilor Brian Worrell introduced a resolution Wednesday endorsing the idea, and it was unanimously adopted.
Sun superstars Alyssa Thomas and DeWanna Bonner left the team as free agents and are back together again in Phoenix, with Thomas having another MVP season. Aside from fun TikToks from Marina Mabrey and rookie sensation Saniya Rivers, their former team has been tough to watch.
The Indiana Fever have been up and down so far on the 2025 WNBA season, currently sitting at a perfectly average 10-10 ahead of Sunday afternoon's home game vs the Dallas Wings. Fever star Caitlin Clark has been in and out of the lineup this year due to various injury concerns,
The Mohegan Tribe, which owns the Sun, is seeking new investors or a sale of the team, leading to recent rumors that the WNBA franchise could move to Boston. The post Boston reportedly unlikely to be a landing spot for WNBA’s Connecticut Sun appeared first on Boston.
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The spokesperson for a would-be ownership group looking to bring the WNBA to Boston says the Mohegan Tribe wants to keep the Connecticut Sun in the state.
A pair of struggling teams play on Sunday as the Connecticut Sun (3-17) head to the West Coast to take on the Los Angeles Sparks (6-14).
WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert announced this past week the league will expand to 18 teams with the additions/returns of clubs in Detroit, Cleveland, and Philadelphia.
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Caitlin Clark has picked Indiana teammate Aliyah Boston No. 1 while Napheesa Collier took her Unrivaled business partner Breanna Stewart first in the WNBA All-Star Game draft.
Boston is ready for the WNBA. My office just filed a resolution calling on the WNBA to move a franchise to Boston, particularly the Connecticut Sun.
Angel Reese Makes WNBA History Against Lynx originally appeared on Athlon Sports.