WNBA All-Star voting increased by more than 600 percent from 2023 to 2024, according to the final numbers the league released on Tuesday, July 2.
Last year, no WNBA player received 100,000 fan votes. In 2024, Caitlin Clark led all vote-getters with 700,735.
Clark’s teammate on the Indiana Fever, Aliyah Boston, received the second-most votes with 618,680. A’ja Wilson, last year’s leading vote-getter, garnered 607,300 votes this year, a 533 percent increase that still dropped her two spots on the overall list.
The WNBA All-Stars will go up against the USA Olympic Women’s Basketball Team on July 20 for this year’s version of the All-Star Game in Phoenix. For Team USA, it will be an exhibition as the team prepares for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.
…
“What’s happening now in women’s basketball is confirmation of what we’ve always known: The demand is there, and women’s sports is a valuable investment,” the WNBA’s chief growth officer, Colie Edison, said in a statement when the league announced its first-month stats. “We’re encouraged by growing engagement across all our verticals, especially as we welcome new and diverse audiences into our fandom. The WNBA continues to experience sustained growth as our league embraces this heightened momentum.”
The WNBA All-Star Game itself should also see a massive ratings increase when it airs on ABC later this month. Not only will the game be loaded with star power, but there will be plenty of story lines to drive interest. Clark and Reese will play as teammates for the first time after going up against each other in classic games both as college and pro athletes. Clark will also face Diana Taurasi of Team USA for the third time in a month. Remember, Taurasi famously told Clark and her fellow rookies “reality is coming” before they entered the league.
For the WNBA, reality is here, and it’s magnificent.