basketball

A’ja Wilson, Paige Bueckers’ aura, Lynx among WNBA offseason winners and losers

Yahoo Sports

For the first time, the WNBA offseason happened all at once. Free agency, the college draft and an expansion draft were squeezed into a 10-day timeline, forcing teams to make a flurry of moves. And with the increased salary cap, more money than ever is at stake if these decisions don’t go according to plan.

Rosters are still in flux, and a few of the league’s top players remain unsigned, though we’re pretty sure Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier and the New York Liberty crew of Breanna Stewar

For the first time, the WNBA offseason happened all at once. Free agency , the college draft and an expansion draft were squeezed into a 10-day timeline, forcing teams to make a flurry of moves. And with the increased salary cap, more money than ever is at stake if these decisions don’t go according to plan.

Rosters are still in flux, and a few of the league’s top players remain unsigned, though we’re pretty sure Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier and the New York Liberty crew of Breanna Stewart, Jonquel Jones and Sabrina Ionescu aren’t going anywhere. Nevertheless, training camp starts Sunday, so now is a good time to assess how teams have fared in this historic period and what this activity means for the 2026 WNBA season. Winner: A’ja Wilson and the Aces Wilson signed the richest deal in WNBA history, a three-year, fully-guaranteed supermax contract worth more than $4.

7 million to return to the Aces. Given Las Vegas has won three of the last four WNBA titles and Wilson’s relationship with coach Becky Hammon, it seemed nearly impossible that she’d be headed anywhere else, but it’s still quite the pay jump for the reigning MVP — $200,000 last season to $1. 4 million this year.

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