logo
WNBA All-Star Game Results

WNBA All-Star Game Results

2025 — Team Collier 151, Team Clark 131
2024 — Team WNBA 117, Team USA 109
2023 — Team Stewart 143, Team Wilson 127
2022 — Team Wilson 134, Team Stewart 112
2021 — Team WNBA 93, Team USA 85
2020 — Canceled
2019 — Team Wilson 129, Team Delle Donne 126
2018 — Team Parker 119, Team Delle Donne 112
2017 — West 130, East 121
2016 — No game, Summer Olympics
2015 — West 117, East 112
2014 — East 125, West 124, OT
2013 — West 102, East 98
2012 — No game, Summer Olympics
2011 — East 118, West 113
2010 — Team USA 99, WNBA All-Stars 72
2009 — West 130, East 118
2008 — No game, Summer Olympics
2007 — East 103, West 99
2006 — East 98, West 82
2005 — West 122, East 99
2004 — USA national team 74, WNBA All-Stars 58
2003 — West 84, East 75
2002 — West 81, East 76
2001 — West 80, East 72
2000 — West 73, East 61
1999 — West 79, East 61
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fever struggle again without Caitlin Clark, lose second straight to Liberty
Fever struggle again without Caitlin Clark, lose second straight to Liberty

USA Today

time30 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Fever struggle again without Caitlin Clark, lose second straight to Liberty

NEW YORK — With the WNBA All-Star Game in the rearview mirror, talk about the contentious collective bargaining agreement meeting, calls for more player rest during the break, and players sporting 'pay us what you owe us' warmup shirts before the festivities in Indianapolis, the only thing that matters for the 51 days left for when the 44-game regular season ends on Sept. 11 is the actual basketball being played. Two teams that have those postseason aspirations are the New York Liberty and Indiana Fever, who ran it back on Tuesday from their previous game last week, which closed out the first half of the season. The defending champions are finally fully healthy, with 2024 Finals MVP Jonquel Jones back after missing a month because of an ankle injury and made sure to add more firepower before the Aug. 7 trade deadline by adding forward Emma Meesseman, who will make her first appearance in the league since 2022 and is also a WNBA Finals MVP, winning the honors in 2019 with the Washington Mystics. Jones' return to the lineup paid immediate dividends, as she opened the scoring with a 3-pointer on her way to 18 points and nine rebounds in 23 minutes, showing little rust from her injury as the Liberty used a 13-0 run to pull away in the second half and defeated Indiana, 98-84, in front of another sellout crowd at the Barclays Center. Jones, who saw her first action since June 19, was one of six New York players in double figures. Breanna Stewart and Leonie Fiebich each scored 17 points as the Liberty (16-6) extended their winning streak to four. Sabrina Ionescu, who finished with 13 points, nine assists and five rebounds, hit three 3-pointers in 70 seconds late in the fourth quarter to give the Liberty their largest lead at 89-75. "It felt great to be back out there. I feel like I am at an eight out of 10 in terms of conditioning," Jones said after the game." Indiana's Kelsey Mitchell led all scorers with 29 points. Aliyah Boston had 15 points, 12 rebounds and six assists before fouling out, and Sophie Cunningham added 15 points for the Fever (12-12), who suffered their worst loss of the season, 98-77, when they were in Brooklyn last week. Both teams and coaches spent considerable time yapping at the officials, as Indiana was called for 22 personal fouls, and New York was whistled for 17, and both were sloppy with the ball: the Liberty had 20 turnovers and the Fever gave it away 19 times. It doesn't get any easier for the Fever, who face the Las Vegas Aces on Thursday, July 24 and play five of their next seven games on the road. Big second half additions Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello said that with the remaining two months of the season, the team will work Jones back into shape and incorporate Meesseman into the rotation. Meesseman was not available against the Fever and has not signed a contract yet, according to general manager Jonathan Kolb. She will be with the team depending on how long her visa application takes to process. 'I think we're in a good spot. We're without one of our key players for such a long time, and I think we handled it as well as we could. There's some games, I think two games that, you know, probably should have could have, but great learning experiences for us," Brondello said. "You know, it's just about getting health and to add someone like Emma (Meesseman), that's pretty exciting. She's a great player. I think she'll fit into the system very easily with the way that we play as a team at both ends of the floor. "You still have to put it all together, you know. Talent doesn't win championships. I'm excited to have everyone and, you know, build these next 23 games into the playoff.' Caitlin Clark's return unknown The Fever again were without Caitlin Clark, who received another opinion on her injured right groin, as head coach Stephanie White said there is no timetable for when the reigning Rookie of the Year will return to the lineup. Clark has missed 11 games this season after never missing a game because of injury during her college career at Iowa or her rookie season. Clark saw a doctor on Tuesday for another opinion on the injury, and White did not have any updates about when she would return to the Fever's lineup. Indiana began the night in sixth place in the WNBA standings, with 20 games remaining in the regular season. 'These soft tissue injuries, sometimes nag until you can actually have time to really allow to heal in the offseason,' White said.

Liberty rip Caitlin Clark-less Fever thanks to Jonquel Jones' big second half
Liberty rip Caitlin Clark-less Fever thanks to Jonquel Jones' big second half

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Liberty rip Caitlin Clark-less Fever thanks to Jonquel Jones' big second half

We've got you covered on the Liberty beat Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Madeline Kenney about all things Liberty and WNBA. tRY IT NOW Jonquel Jones' return wasn't pretty at first. She started just 1-for-7 from the field. She committed silly fouls. She wasn't the imposing presence on defense she usually is. Advertisement But it was just early rust. Jones shook off her rough start and was paramount in the second half of the Liberty's 98-84 win over the Caitlin Clark-less Fever on Tuesday night at Barclays Center. She became a force in the paint. She began vacuuming rebounds at will. She affected shots with her size. Jones finished with a team-high 18 points on 5-for-13 shooting from the field along with nine rebounds. Her 3-pointer with 6:01 left in the game gave the Liberty a nine-point lead — their largest of the night up to that point. Advertisement She was making her long-awaited return, having missed more than a month after re-spraining her right ankle. And she very quickly made it obvious just how much the Liberty had missed her. The Liberty had two All-Stars in Breanna Stewart and Sabrina Ionescu, and a third in Natasha Cloud participating in the week's festivities. Jones, their anchor in the paint, is a perennial All-Star and likely would have been again this year if she didn't miss so much time due to the injury. 3 Jonquel Jones, who scored a team-high 18 points, shoots a jumper during the Liberty's 98-84 win over the Fever on July 22, 2025. Jason Szenes / New York Post Advertisement But it was one of their role players in Leonie Fiebich who joined Jones in saving them after the All-Star break. While the Liberty's usual leading faces were sluggish and sloppy early in the first game of the second half of the season, Fiebich carried them for large stretches of the game. Each time the Fever looked to be making a run — and there were plenty — and begin pulling away, there was Fiebich with a clutch bucket. 3 Jonquel Jones looks to make a move on Aliyah Boston during the Liberty's win over the Fever. Jason Szenes / New York Post Advertisement She finished with 17 points on 5-for-7 shooting from the field and perfect 2-for-2 from 3-point range along with five rebounds. The Liberty were on the ropes late in the third quarter, down 67-60 with 2:24 left. But they closed the quarter on a 9-0 to take a two-point lead into the fourth quarter and promptly scored the first four points of the final period to extend their lead to six. Fiebich drilled a 3-pointer in the third-quarter run and hit two free throws in the run. Jones and the Liberty's other stars finally came alive and took it from there. Stewart woke up after a slow start of her own, recording 11 points in the second half to finish with 17 on 6-for-11 shooting. She also picked up three steals. 3 Sabrina Ionescu, who scored 10 straight points in the fourth quarter, shoots over Natasha Howard during the Liberty's win over the Fever. Jason Szenes / New York Post Ionescu helped the Liberty put the game away, erupting out of nowhere for 10 straight Liberty points in the fourth quarter as their lead ballooned to 13. She had been struggling with her shot up to that point. Kelsey Mitchell paced the Fever with 29 points but was quiet down the stretch. Advertisement The Liberty were careless for too many stretches of the game, committing 19 turnovers. Too many were avoidable, the product of ill-advised passes into traffic. But when a team is as stacked as the defending champions are, there is room for errors. And for the first time in a while, that stacked roster is pretty much entirely back together.

Angel Reese Bracing for WNBA Suspension After Sky-Lynx
Angel Reese Bracing for WNBA Suspension After Sky-Lynx

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Angel Reese Bracing for WNBA Suspension After Sky-Lynx

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Fresh off a solid showing in the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game, Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese gave her fans something to talk about on Tuesday night. In the Sky's first matchup in nearly a week, Reese, who hasn't played since July 14 due to a lingering leg issue, and the rest of her teammates came out flat, struggling to generate any offense while committing turnover after turnover. In Tuesday's 91-68 loss to the Minnesota Lynx, Reese locked up her 16th double-double of the season (11 points, 11 rebounds)—she also had nine turnovers—but what had fans talking was what happened with 2:42 left in the first quarter and the Sky holding a 16-12 lead. Reese was assessed a technical foul—her seventh of the season—which will lead to a suspension if and when she picks up her eighth, per Underdog WNBA. "Status alert: Angel Reese has been assessed 7th technical foul. If she receives another, she'll be automatically suspended one game," Underdog WNBA wrote on X. More Basketball: Marcus Smart Reveals How Luka Doncic Convinced Him to Join the Lakers Angel Reese #5 of the Chicago Sky celebrates a play against the Minnesota Lynx during the first half at Wintrust Arena on July 12, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. Angel Reese #5 of the Chicago Sky celebrates a play against the Minnesota Lynx during the first half at Wintrust Arena on July 12, 2025 in Chicago, Basketball: Caitlin Clark Trolls Kelsey Plum After Getting Shaded at All-Star Game In addition to leading the WNBA in rebounding, Reese also leads the league in technicals — two more than the next-closest player, Shakira Austin of the Washington Mystics (five). Reese, Austin, and Atlanta's Allisha Gray are the only players in the WNBA with more than two technical this season. Per WNBA rules, "any player or coach is automatically suspended without pay for one game upon receiving an eighth technical foul during the regular season. For every two additional technical fouls received during that regular season, the player or coach will be automatically suspended for an additional game." The WNBA automatically suspended players after their seventh technical foul up until this season before increasing that number to eight with the shift from a 44-game schedule to a 40-game schedule.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store