The Houston Comets became the first WNBA champions in 1997, defeating the New York Liberty. Led by stars like Cynthia Cooper and Tina Thompson, the team defied expectations to win four consecutive titles.
Key points
Houston Comets won the first WNBA championship in 1997
Cynthia Cooper was a standout player, scoring 44 points in a game
The Comets were predicted to finish last before the season
They won four consecutive championships from 1997 to 2000
The Houston Comets beat the New York Liberty to become the WNBAâs first champions in 1997.Photograph: Andrew D Bernstein/NBAE/Getty Images
The Houston Comets beat the New York Liberty to become the WNBAâs first champions in 1997.Photograph: Andrew D Bernstein/NBAE/Getty Images
(Photograph: Andrew D Bernstein/NBAE/Getty Images)
Fran Harris remembers a late-night dinner in Sacramento. Her Houston Comets squad had just dispatched the lowly Monarchs by 10 points. To celebrate, she and a few teammates, including Cynthia Cooper, Tammy Jackson and Kim Perrot, decided to grab a bite. Cooper had scored 44 in the 25 July 1997 contest, and her talents dazzled even her dinner companions.
âI said to Cynthia, âI just cannot believe how great youâre playing â and I know how great you are!ââ Harris tells the Guardian. âAnd she goes, âI know!â She was just, like, *Yeah, Iâm the motherfucker!* I was like, âYou absolutely are!ââ
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But Cooper, an eventual two-time WNBA MVP and four-time champion, was not supposed to be the leagueâs top player. Sheâd played in Europe for a number of seasons after winning college championships at USC in the mid-1980s. But when the WNBA began in the summer of 1997, she was already 34.
In fact, her entire Houston Comets team, who would win the leagueâs first championship â as well as the next three â were predicted to finish last by many ahead of the inaugural campaign. (They could get a chance to add to their tally: on Wednesday the WNBA confirmed a franchise will return to Houston in 2027, 19 years after the original Comets folded.)
âThey were very unimpressed with our roster for some reason,â says Harris, now a television analyst for the WNBAâs Dallas Wings. âWhen we read that, we were like, â*This shit is funny! That is hilarious**.*â
The Comets were an older team when the league began. But age can help when it comes to winning trophies. And though the Comets werenât only comprised of vets â they boasted the first-ever No 1 draft pick, Tina Thompson, and 26-year-old star Sheryl Swoopes, who joined later in the season after giving birth to her son, Jordan â the reputation was hard to shake.
âPeople just thought our team was too old to compete,â says Yolanda Moore, who was fresh out of college at the time, and a mother of two. âThey thought the championship would be between New York and LA.â
When the WNBA began, professional womenâs basketball was in a precarious state. The WBL, the first pro womenâs league in the US, started nearly 20 years prior. But it folded within three years. After that, several more leagues popped up, including the ABL, which launched in 1996. That year, the US boasted an all-time Olympic team, and the league wanted to capitalize on the enthusiasm around their gold medal.
But things didnât go to plan for the ABL. Harris, who had won a NCAA championship in 1986 with Texas, had heard about the ABL and was interested, but a former teammate working as a college coach warned her against joining, with the NBA getting ready to launch the WNBA.
Harris took note. The ABL, without big-money backing, folded after two seasons.
Tryouts for the Cometsâ inaugural season kicked off on Motherâs Day weekend. âIt was just survival of the fittest,â says Moore. âIt was a free-for-all. We did your basic three-man-wave â that kind of stuff. But really we were just put into teams and played basketball. And at the end of every session, they would make cuts.â
The Cometsâ first coach was Van Chancellor. A veteran of the college ranks, heâd been Mooreâs coach at Mississippi. Still, he told her that she had a âsnowballâs chance in hellâ to make the Comets, she says. Moore, who graduated with a degree in journalism, initially wanted to be âRobin Roberts Jrâ. When she heard about the WNBA, though, she had to jump for it.
It was no easy path. Sheâd given birth to her second child that January and set aside her sneakers for eight weeks. Sheâd had a complicated pregnancy, involving surgery. âIt was really tough,â she says. But somehow she began working out again in March. âThen I went to the tryout in May,â she says.
She also didnât listen to her coachâs negative attitude. Mooreâs perseverance landed her a spot on the Cometsâ practice team, and later one on the main roster.
Harris, who also had to navigate challenges to make the Comets, remembers the team being especially accommodating to the roster once it was set. They helped the players get apartments and everything else they needed to settle into a new city. The Comets were part of the Houston Rockets organization and shared facilities with their NBA sibling.
âThey were coming off their world championships [in 1994 and 1995] with Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon,â Harris says. âWe trained at the same place where the Rockets trained in Westwood. We were like ships passing through the days with those guys.â
âThey came to our games,â Moore says of Rockets players. âWe didnât feel like the step-kids.â
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Comets players also shared rooms with teammates on the road during that first season. Harris bunked with Tammy Jackson. (âWe were like family,â Harris says.) Moore roomed with Thompson. (âShe had her own routines, so I got to see that up close and personal!â Moore says with a laugh.)
Thinking back on the year, Harris vividly remembers the Cometsâ first regular-season game. It was on the road in Cleveland with an official attendance of 11,455. âIt was sold out,â she says. âI was like: âWoah!â The crowd for that moment was a big deal.â
In a way, Harris says, that entire first year was like a dream. The WNBA marked the first time longtime womenâs basketball stars could play against one another professionally in the US. âWe had all played against each other in college,â Harris says. âNow, here we were playing against each other in a pro league. It was incredibly surreal.â
That the players were given the chance to show their skills in the WNBA was an honor, says Moore. But it was also something that demanded a big effort. The players wanted to win games, but they also wanted the league to continue into the future.
âNot only were we trying to prove ourselves in the league,â says Moore, a bench player in her first season before blossoming into a top backup center, âbut we were women trying to prove ourselves to this sport, that we deserved to have this space. We were proving that this was our time.â
And no one embodied that like Cooper.
âYou would go to practice,â Moore continues, âand sheâs already there. Sheâs already been there for, like, two hours, working out. She would be drenched in sweat, having to change clothes just to get *ready* for practice.â
Moore says that Cooperâs ascent â she was the WNBAâs first MVP and first back-to-back MVP â at times clashed with Swoopesâs fame. âOur team was so competitive,â she says. In many ways, Swoopes was the face of the WNBA. She was the leagueâs first signee. She had her own signature Nike shoe, unheard of for a womanâs hooper at the time. Swoopes missed the first six weeks after giving birth, but she worked her way in for the final nine games of the regular season.
Cooperâs rise and Swoopesâs late start created some tension within the Comets. âIt wasnât anything that was hidden,â Moore says. âEverybody knew it was competition. It was, *This is my team, no this is my team, no this is my team!*â
Moore remembers team officials calling meetings because Cooper had been the leading scorer in a given game but Swoopes got the limelight in the next dayâs newspaper. âThere was some pettiness and a lot of ego when it came to that,â Moore says. âUnderstandably so, because they both had earned the right to be in that space.â
Those spats were nothing compared with the way the Comets ran through the league in 1997. (The trio of Cooper, Swoopes and Thompson would later be known as the WNBAâs original âBig Threeâ.) Picked by many to finish in the basement, Houston finished first in the Eastern Conference with a record of 18-10. Then came the playoffs.
âI remember the fatigue,â Harris says. âIt was a condensed season. Even though you might think you shouldnât be that tired, youâre packing a lot of games into 100 days. And not for a lot of money! I think my salary for the first year was $15,000.â
The WNBA playoffs were especially short that opening campaign. The Comets took advantage and beat the Charlotte Sting 1-0 and then the New York Liberty in the Finals 1-0.
âTo make history and be the first team to win the WNBA championship in 1997 was absolutely incredible,â Harris says. âOf course, we were on a high. Then Princess Diana dies.â
The Comets beat the Liberty in Houston on 30 August 1997, and Diana was pronounced dead the next day after a car accident in Paris that left millions in shock. âWe were torn up about that,â Moore says.
âWe went from winning the championship â the news went from elation to, like, *What?* To deflation,â Harris agrees.
Life and basketball, of course, must go on. Shortly after the victory, Houston threw a parade for their victorious Comets. It was everything Moore and her compatriots could have hoped for.
âAs a woman, as a Black woman,â Moore says, âpursuing your dreams, pursuing your goals, despite the obstacles, despite the challenges â to be embraced and celebrated, it just seemed like the whole city shut down and showed up for us.â
That wasnât the case everywhere.
âIt wasnât like that in Orlando where I went [in 1999],â Moore says. âBut in Houston, it was like, *We want you here! What do you need?*â
Indeed, Houston was simply the right place for the WNBAâs first champions to rise.
âThat city embraced every single player from the first man to the 12th,â Moore says. âThey were happy for us to be there. They *wanted* us there. To win that first championship for them â baby, that city was electric!â
Q&A
Who were the key players on the Houston Comets during their championship run?
Key players included Cynthia Cooper, Tina Thompson, Sheryl Swoopes, and Fran Harris.
What year did the Houston Comets win their first WNBA championship?
The Houston Comets won their first WNBA championship in 1997.
How many consecutive championships did the Houston Comets win?
The Houston Comets won four consecutive championships from 1997 to 2000.
What challenges did the Houston Comets face before their inaugural season?
The Comets faced skepticism regarding their roster's age and had to navigate a competitive environment following the failures of previous women's leagues.
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