
The biggest question facing every WNBA team in training camp
WNBA training camps open with key questions for each team.
The 2026 WNBA Draft will take place on Monday night, featuring the Dallas Wings as the first pick. Fans can tune in to witness the next generation of basketball talent entering the league.
How to watch 2026 WNBA Draft: TV info, players to know, updated order
Cue the glimmering lights, the bright orange carpet, rapturous visions of a limitless future. The WNBAâs 30th annual rookie draft goes live on Monday night. This is where hoop dreams get professional upgrades, and where championship aspirants lay foundations. Itâs also probably where commissioner Cathy Engelbert gets booed.
The rebuilding Dallas Wings are on the clock. The stacked Minnesota Lynx lurk behind them, thanks to some cunning trade foresight. Two new teams jump into the rotation after their frenzied expansion draft. Hereâs what to expect from it all.
Venue: The Shed at Hudson Yards â New York City
Time: 7 p.m. ET, Monday
TV: ESPN
Streaming: Fubo (Stream Free Now)
ESPN programs are also available with an ESPN Unlimited subscription.
1. Dallas Wings
2. Minnesota Lynx (from Chicago Sky)
3. Seattle Storm (from Los Angeles Sparks)
4. Washington Mystics
5. Chicago Sky (from Connecticut Sun)
6. Toronto Tempo
7. Portland Fire
8. Golden State Valkyries
9. Washington Mystics (from Seattle Storm)
10. Indiana Fever
11. Washington Mystics (from New York Liberty via Connecticut Sun)
12. Connecticut Sun (from Phoenix Mercury)
13. Atlanta Dream
14. Seattle Storm (from Las Vegas Aces)
15. Connecticut Sun (from Minnesota Lynx via Washington Mystics)
The Wings hold the No. 1 pick for a second consecutive season. They took franchise cornerstone Paige Bueckers last spring. Dallas tied Chicago for the Wâs worst record at 10-34, then won the draft lottery in November.
The Sky landed with the second selection, but it goes to the Lynx, perennial title contenders who went a league-best 34-10 in the regular season. Minnesota swapped spots with Chicago as part of last yearâs deal for the No. 11 pick, which the Sky used to take Hailey Van Lith. The lefty guard averaged just 3.5 points per game during her rookie campaign.
Another playoff incumbent has the third pick. Seattle was one missed jumper from a first-round upset of eventual champion Las Vegas. The Storm now get to load up with a prime prospect. Two years ago, they traded Kia Nurse and the No. 4 pick that became Rickea Jackson for Los Angelesâ 2026 first-rounder. Nurse left the Sparks in free agency after 2024; Jackson is averaging 14 points per game through her first two seasons.
Washington is slated in the fourth spot. Last draft, the Mystics took Sonia Citron at No. 3 and Kiki Iriafen at No. 4 â both ascendants earned All-Rookie and All-Star honors. Chicago is up fifth, due to a pick swap with Connecticut that sent Marina Mabrey to the Sun.
A coin flip was held to settle positioning between Portland and Toronto, the leagueâs newest franchises. The Tempo won the toss, then elected to take the higher No. 6 pick. The Fire got first dibs in the expansion draft, and thus gets the lower No. 7 pick on Monday.
Itâs a strong draft class for those in need of a backcourt boost. Azzi Fudd of UConn is a first-team All-American, coming off impressive shooting splits of 48.1/44.7/95.5 percent. TCUâs Olivia Miles arrives with multiple March Madness triple-doubles across her collegiate career. Raven Johnson has two national championships as a South Carolina staple. LSU guard Flauâjae Johnson is a polished bucket-getter ⊠and a rising rapper.
This draft is loaded with international talent as well. Spanish center Awa Fam is expected to be a top pick, due to her offensive mobility and switchable defense. A similar hype has built around French guard Nell Angloma â scouts like her downhill aggression.
The new champions of college basketball will be heavily represented in this draft. Star center Lauren Betts has towering upside on defense and off the glass, while combo guard Kiki Rice is a two-way playmaker and spot-up shooter Gianna Kneepkens brings deep perimeter range. UCLA started five seniors en route to its NCAA Tournament domination, and each one has first-round potential.
Here are the 15 invitees to the draft night festivities, listed in alphabetical order by last name:
Nell Angloma (France)
Lauren Betts (UCLA)
Angela DugaliÄ (UCLA)
Awa Fam Thiam (Spain)
Azzi Fudd (Connecticut)
Gabriela Jaquez (UCLA)
Flauâjae Johnson (LSU)
Raven Johnson (South Carolina)
Gianna Kneepkens (UCLA)
TaâNiya Latson (South Carolina)
Cotie McMahon (Ole Miss)
Olivia Miles (TCU)
Madina Okot (South Carolina/Kenya)
Kiki Rice (UCLA)
Marta SuĂĄrez (Spain)
Mondayâs proceedings begin with the âWNBA Draft Orange Carpet Special,â airing at 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPN2. Potential draftees and celebrity guests make chic entrances. Itâs become something of a basketball fashion show â Coach is the presenting sponsor. Last time, participants included actress Aubrey Plaza, presenter Elle Duncan and glorious mascot Ellie the Elephant. Saniya Rivers made a statement with her hand-painted bag:
The orange carpet show is hosted outside the venue by Malika Andrews. Alongside her are Monica McNutt, Andraya Carter and Chiney Ogwumike, the No. 1 pick in 2014.
Thirty minutes before the draft, ESPN airs its âWNBA Countdownâ pregame program. Andrews, Carter and Ogwumike are on that studio desk. Duncan was a âWNBA Countdownâ host, but she now leads Netflixâs live sports coverage.
The draft telecast itself toggles between picks at the podium, reactions from fans, analysis from the desk and live interviews with selected players. Carter, Hall of Famer Rebecca Lobo and Holly Rowe flank host Ryan Ruocco (âyou bet!â). There are broadcast set pieces around the leagueâs 30th anniversary, voiced by fellow Hall of Famer and inaugural WNBA pick Tina Thompson.
| Year | Team | Player | College |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Dallas Wings | Paige Bueckers | UConn |
| 2024 | Indiana Fever | Caitlin Clark | Iowa |
| 2023 | Indiana Fever | Aliyah Boston | South Carolina |
| 2022 | Atlanta Dream | Rhyne Howard | Kentucky |
| 2021 | Dallas Wings | Charli Collier | Texas |
| 2020 | New York Liberty | Sabrina Ionescu | Oregon |
| 2019 | Las Vegas Aces | Jackie Young | Notre Dame |
| 2018 | Las Vegas Aces | A'ja Wilson | South Carolina |
| 2017 | San Antonio Stars (now Aces) | Kelsey Plum | Washington |
Streaming or ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic*. Restrictions may apply.* The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process, and do not review stories before publication.
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
Minnesota Lynx, New York Liberty, Seattle Storm, Los Angeles Sparks, Washington Mystics, Atlanta Dream, Chicago Sky, Connecticut Sun, Indiana Fever, Dallas Wings, Las Vegas Aces, Phoenix Mercury, Golden State Valkyries, Portland Fire, Toronto Tempo, WNBA, Fubo Partnership, How to Watch
2026 The Athletic Media Company
The 2026 WNBA Draft is scheduled to start on Monday night, but the exact time has not been specified.
The Dallas Wings have the first pick in the 2026 WNBA Draft.
Viewers can watch the 2026 WNBA Draft on designated sports networks, though specific channels have not been mentioned.
All 12 WNBA teams, including two new expansion teams, will participate in the 2026 WNBA Draft.

WNBA training camps open with key questions for each team.

Check out the top 10 plays from Victor Wembanyama's record-setting season!

NBA 2026 Awards: Key Ballot Insights from Bontemps

10 NFL draft prospects to watch for fantasy football this year!

Get ready for the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs with our mega-preview of all 16 teams!

Spring football games feature 23 Power 4 matchups this weekend, with the ACC hosting eight and the SEC seven. Notable teams include Virginia Tech under new coach James Franklin and Michigan led by Kyle Whittingham.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
| 2016 | Seattle Storm | Breanna Stewart | UConn |