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Tina Charles, UConn women's basketball legend, announced her retirement after 15 years in the WNBA. She retires as the league's all-time leader in rebounds, double-doubles, and made field goals.
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UNCASVILLE â UConn womenâs basketball legend Tina Charles played her last WNBA game on Sept. 10, 2025 in the same place where her career began, wearing a Connecticut Sun jersey on the court at Mohegan Sun Arena.
No one knew at the time that the Sunâs season-ending 88-72 loss to the Atlanta Dream would mark Charlesâ final moment as a professional basketball player. It came as a surprise to most of her former teammates when the future Hall of Famer officially announced her retirement Tuesday after 15 years.
âI was shocked,â Sun guard Saniya Rivers said Wednesday. âSheâs done a lot for this game. I know Iâve only been here the one time, one year, but she was my vet, so Iâm very blessed to have been able to share a jersey with her. She spoke a lot of words of wisdom into me, a lot of motivation, so Iâm just blessed to have called her my teammate.â
Charles was the first No. 1 draft pick in Sun history when she was selected out of UConn in 2010. She retires as the WNBAâs all-time leader in rebounds (4,262), double-doubles (201) and made field goals (3,364), and she is second all-time in scoring (8,396 points) behind only fellow UConn great Diana Taurasi. Charles was the 2012 WNBA MVP, a nine-time All-WNBA selection, an eight-time All-Star and a three-time All-Defensive team member. She was also a three-time Olympic gold medalist and three-time World Cup gold medalist with Team USA from 2012-20.
â(Her legacy) is just excellence,â Sun general manager Morgan Tuck said. âThereâs only a handful of players that have been as successful as Tina, and the fact that she did it over 14, 15 years, thatâs hard to do. Most people donât make it that long, so I think any time someoneâs going to think of Tina Charles, no matter where she played whether thatâs college, pro, overseas, Olympics, youâre going to think of excellence.â
Tina Charles holds the records for all-time leader in rebounds (4,262), double-doubles (201), and made field goals (3,364) in the WNBA.
Tina Charles announced her retirement on May 5, 2026, after playing her last game on September 10, 2025.
Tina Charles was a nine-time All-WNBA selection, an eight-time All-Star, and a three-time Olympic gold medalist.
Teammates, including Saniya Rivers, expressed shock and gratitude, highlighting her impact and wisdom as a veteran player.
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Charles was a perennial All-Star with the Sun from 2010-13, then with the New York Liberty from 2014-19, but the latter part of her career was tumultuous. She was medically excused from the 2020 WNBA season held amid the COVID-19 pandemic due to extrinsic asthma, then returned to the league with the Washington Mystics in 2021. She played 16 games with the Phoenix Mercury in 2022 before agreeing to a contract divorce with the franchise and signing with the Seattle Storm for the final 18 games of the season. She went unsigned as a free agent in 2023, then returned to the league for a season with the Atlanta Dream in 2024.
When Tuck, a fellow UConn alum, took over as the Sunâs general manager entering the 2025 seasons, she jumped at the opportunity to bring Charles back to the franchise that drafted her. Tuck remembers watching in high school when Charles helped lead the Huskies to back-to-back undefeated NCAA titles in 2009 and â10, and she said the legendary center was part of the reason she committed to UConn in 2012.
âSheâs literally done everything that any basketball player could dream of doing,â Tuck said. âI think she retired at a time where itâs like, watching her play, you didnât think that she needed to retire, so Iâm glad she got to go out on her own terms and be celebrated in a way that shows sheâs one of the best to ever touch a basketball. I think itâs really cool that we got a chance to have her start and end her career in Connecticut.â
Connecticut center Brittney Griner never got to share the court with Charles in the WNBA, but the UConn legend was one of her first veteran leaders when she began competing on the USA Basketball senior national team. Griner won a gold medal alongside Charles in her debut at the 2014 FIBA World Cup, and they also brought home gold together from the 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games as well as the 2018 World Cup.
While sheâs sad to see Charlesâ career end, Griner said she wonât miss trying to guard the future Hall of Famerâs signature move in the post.
âTinaâs a special person, always competed hard. I can hear her yelling right now, doing that hook shot and the ref giving her that call, and Iâm just like, âWhat?! How?'â Griner reminisced with a grin Wednesday. âI know whatever she does after basketball, I know itâs going to be good and sheâs going to do it to the fullest, because thatâs what she did with her career.â
Charles may not be on the court anymore, but her impact is still felt on the Sunâs current roster. Forward Aneesah Morrow said Charles constantly reminded during her rookie season her to slow down her game and play at her own pace, and that advice sticks with her as she enters her second year in the WNBA.
âI felt like the speed of the game, I was trying to catch up to it majority of the time, because the league does move a lot faster,â Morrow said. âShe always told me, if you take one dribble or one drive, you can get past any opponent. Youâll see that in a few of my games Iâve done that already, just taking my time, reading the defender and getting to the spots I want to get to.â
Former UConn standout Aaliyah Edwards trained with Charles several times when the veteran returned to visit Storrs during Edwardsâ college career, and Edwards finally got to share the court with Charles as a teammate in 2025 after she was traded from the Washington Mystics to the Sun midseason. Edwards said the Huskies great was like an older sister to her, and sheâll always remember the joy that the Charles brought to the practice gym and the locker room.
âWhen I first saw the news, it was kind of sad knowing that last season was my last season playing with her, playing against her or playing alongside her,â Edwards said. âIt just meant the world to me. Sheâs such a bright light. She always made me laugh, always made me happy, but also on the court, she pushed me to challenge myself and pushed me to continue to be a great player and not settle for being average. So shoutout to Tina â I love you Tina!â