Packers not expecting to play Lions in Munich in 2026
Packers president says Lions want home game, not Munich in 2026
The WNBA aims to revive the Houston Comets franchise in 2027 but is facing a trademark dispute with TSTM Holdings, a mysterious company that filed for the Comets name. The WNBA's trademark for the Comets lapsed in 2021, complicating their plans.
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The WNBA plans to revive the historic Houston Comets franchise in 2027, but the league is locked in a federal trademark dispute with a mysterious company that might threaten its ability to use the Comets name.
The Houston Comets were one of the WNBAâs original eight franchises and won the leagueâs first four championships before folding in 2008. On March 30, a group led by billionaire Tilman Fertitta, who owns the NBAâs Houston Rockets, announced it had agreed to buy the Connecticut Sun and relocate the team to Houston. The deal is pending final approval from the WNBA Board of Governors.
In early 2025, close to the same time the Rocketsâ ownership group formally submitted a bid for an expansion team, the WNBA applied to trademark the Houston Comets name but found it had been beaten to the punch by a business with no apparent ties to professional basketball.
The other company is a Delaware limited liability company called TSTM Holdings, which submitted its trademark registration application in 2024. The WNBA, which allowed its Houston Comets trademark to lapse in 2021, is opposing TSTM's application in the federal trademark office.
The WNBA did not respond to requests for comment.
Multiple trademark law experts told USA TODAY that while these types of disputes are not uncommon, it could develop into a major headache for the WNBA if TSTM Holdings is granted registration for the Comets name.
The WNBA is already having trouble reclaiming trademarks for the Cleveland Rockers and Detroit Shock, two of its other former franchises. The league granted expansion teams to Cleveland and Detroit scheduled to begin play in 2028 and 2029, respectively, but was denied trademark registration for the Detroit Shock and is facing opposition for the Cleveland Rockers registration. Both names are registered to the Women's Basketball League, a startup pro league that has yet to tip off.
The difference with Houston's situation is while Cleveland and Detroit did not publicly commit to reviving their old team names, Houston announced its plans to return as the Comets.
âMy family and I are thrilled for the opportunity to bring the Houston Comets back to this incredible city,â Rockets Alternate Governor Patrick Fertitta said in a March 30 news release. âWe believe the time is right to begin the next great era of Comets basketball, and we look forward to working with the WNBA as we move through this process.â
The WNBA is opposing TSTM Holdings' trademark application for the Houston Comets name, which the league wants to use for its planned revival of the franchise.
TSTM Holdings is a Delaware limited liability company with no apparent ties to professional basketball, and its ownership details are not publicly disclosed.
The Houston Comets were one of the WNBA's original franchises, winning the first four championships before folding in 2008.
The WNBA plans to revive the Houston Comets franchise in 2027.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Azzi Fudd who was selected first overall by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed at Hudson Yards.
Azzi Fudd (R) of UConn hugs WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected with the 1st pick in the first round by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
Azzi Fudd of UConn celebrates after being selected with the 1st pick in the first round by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Olivia Miles who was selected second overall by the Minnesota Lynx during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed at Hudson Yards.
Olivia Miles of TCU celebrates after being selected with the 2nd pick in the first round by the Minnesota Lynx.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Awa Fam Thiam who was selected third overall by the Seattle Storm.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Lauren Betts who was selected fourth overall by the Washington Mystics.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (right) poses for photos with Gabriela Jaquez who was selected fifth overall by the Chicago Sky.
(L-R) Azzi Fudd of UConn and Cotie McMahon of Ole Miss pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
(L-R) Angela Dugalic of UCLA, Kiki Rice of UCLA, Gianna Kneepkens of UCLA, Lauren Betts of UCLA and Gabriela Jaquez of UCLA during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
(L-R) Awa Fam Thiam of Spain and Nell Angloma of France pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft.
Raven Johnson of South Carolina, left, Madina Okot of Kenya, center, and TaĂNiya Latson of South Carolina pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
2026 WNBA Draft prospects pose for a group photo before the event at The Shed at Hudson Yards in NYC on April 13, 2026.
2026 WNBA Draft prospects pose for a group photo before the event at The Shed at Hudson Yards in NYC on April 13, 2026.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Azzi Fudd who was selected first overall by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed at Hudson Yards.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Azzi Fudd who was selected first overall by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed at Hudson Yards.
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Azzi Fudd (R) of UConn hugs WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected with the 1st pick in the first round by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
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Azzi Fudd of UConn celebrates after being selected with the 1st pick in the first round by the Dallas Wings during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Olivia Miles who was selected second overall by the Minnesota Lynx during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed at Hudson Yards.
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Olivia Miles of TCU celebrates after being selected with the 2nd pick in the first round by the Minnesota Lynx.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Awa Fam Thiam who was selected third overall by the Seattle Storm.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) poses for photos with Lauren Betts who was selected fourth overall by the Washington Mystics.
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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert (right) poses for photos with Gabriela Jaquez who was selected fifth overall by the Chicago Sky.
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(L-R) Azzi Fudd of UConn and Cotie McMahon of Ole Miss pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
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(L-R) Angela Dugalic of UCLA, Kiki Rice of UCLA, Gianna Kneepkens of UCLA, Lauren Betts of UCLA and Gabriela Jaquez of UCLA during the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
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(L-R) Awa Fam Thiam of Spain and Nell Angloma of France pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft.
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Raven Johnson of South Carolina, left, Madina Okot of Kenya, center, and TaĂNiya Latson of South Carolina pose prior to the 2026 WNBA Draft at The Shed on April 13, 2026 in New York City.
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2026 WNBA Draft prospects pose for a group photo before the event at The Shed at Hudson Yards in NYC on April 13, 2026.
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2026 WNBA Draft prospects pose for a group photo before the event at The Shed at Hudson Yards in NYC on April 13, 2026.
Whether the WNBA can get the Comets name back will depend on the answers to a few key questions, said Mark McKenna, a UCLA law professor and expert in trademark law. Did the WNBA abandon the Comets mark, or did the league continue to market merchandise for the team? Does TSTM Holdings intend to use the Comets name or is it angling for a payout?
âIf you take for granted that the WNBA abandoned its prior rights so itâs not able to overcome these applications, and then those actually turn into registrations because that company (TSTM Holdings) does in fact make use, then theyâre going to have priority and theyâre going to be able to block the WNBA from using that name at all,â McKenna said. âBut thereâs a bunch of ifs in that statement, right?â
Kia Kamran, the Los Angeles attorney representing TSTM Holdings in its trademark application, declined to answer USA TODAYâs emailed questions about the company or its motives.
âWe do not comment on ongoing litigation matters,â Kamran wrote.
Once approved, trademark registrations must be renewed every 10 years to remain active. The WNBA held registrations for several Comets trademarks throughout the teamâs first run of existence from 1997-2008 and continued to renew most up until 2021. When the league let its last registration expire, it left the door open for another entity to take it.
Documents filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) show that TSTM Holdings applied on May 17, 2024 to register the wordmark âHouston Cometsâ for intended use in clothing, decals, sporting goods, digital media and âentertainment in the nature of live basketball games.â WNBA Enterprises filed its own overlapping trademark application on Feb. 3, 2025 and filed its notice of opposition against TSTM Holdings on May 27, 2025.
Rebecca Tushnet, a professor at Harvard Law School who formerly practiced intellectual property law, said the issue is not just who applied for registration earlier, but also who used the mark first in commerce. Even if a registration expires or is canceled, the original owner can maintain what is called âcommon law rightsâ by continuing to use the mark.
âRegistration is not necessary to have rights, use is necessary to have rights,â Tushnet said. âSo whether or not the registration lapsed is not super important. What Iâd want to know is what, if anything, the WNBA continued to do with the mark.â
The WNBA still sells Comets jerseys in its online store. In its opposition filing, an attorney for the WNBA argues the league retained common law rights for its previous Comets trademarks because it kept marketing products related to the team. The WNBAâs attorney also argues the general public associates the Houston Comets with the WNBA, which would create likelihood for confusion if TSTM is allowed to trademark the name for similar goods and services.
Cynthia Cooper of the Houston Comets celebrates after beating the New York Liberty in the WNBA Finals in 2000.
âWNBAE has continued to engage in marketing and licensing of various goods and services relating to the storied Houston Comets basketball team, as the pending applications noted below help demonstrate,â the leagueâs attorney wrote. âIndeed, with the recent surge of fandom for womenâs sports and womenâs basketball in particular â fueled in part by recent stars like Indiana Feverâs Caitlin Clark and Chicago Skyâs Angel Reese â there has been more interest in the WNBA and its teams than ever, and along with it, the corresponding protection of the WNBA brands.â
An attorney for TSTM, however, argued the WNBA had abandoned the Comets mark and as a result, it was up for grabs.
U.S. statute says abandonment of a trademark is presumed after three years of non-use, unless an owner can prove continuous intent to resume using the mark. Itâs not enough that the WNBA decided this year to bring the Comets back, McKenna said. If the league canât produce evidence that it kept using the name over the last several years, it must show that it always had concrete plans to resume using the name again.
âI imagine this other company will say, âYou havenât had a team for almost 20 years, and you might say that had an intention to resume use, but you canât just have an abstract thought that you will do that in the future,ââ McKenna said. âYou need some concrete evidence of it, and itâs been a long time.â
On the surface, TSTM Holdings does not appear to have any connection to the WNBA or professional basketball. Itâs unclear who is behind the company or why they are pursuing a Houston Comets trademark.
In an amended notice filed on Feb. 23, an attorney for the WNBA wrote, âWhen WNBAE inquired with Applicant about its intentions in filing the Application, Applicant refused to provide any explanation indicating good faith on its part. Applicant responded only that the owner of Applicant was âknownâ to WNBAE and that Applicant was not ready even to identify the individual(s) involved with Applicant, let alone address whether it has any bona fide basis for applying to register âHouston Cometsâ as a trademark.â
Business owners who desire privacy often choose to incorporate their companies in Delaware because the state does not require the public disclosure of the names of members in LLCs or shareholders in corporations.
Publicly available state filings show that TSTM Holdings was incorporated on April 3, 2023, but those documents do not reveal names of associated individuals for the company, which uses a registered agent service to receive legal paperwork on its behalf.
TSTM Holdings has seven other pending federal trademark applications, only some of which are tangentially related to sports. TSTMâs application for the mark âY2Kâ is being opposed by Take-Two Interactive, the company that produces the popular NBA 2K video game. TSTM also applied to register âThe Rage,â for use in wrestling performances and entertainment.
The companyâs other trademark applications include âStanding on business,â â2 to get in,â and âFinsta,â a slang term for a secondary private Instagram account.
Tushnet said for TSTM Holdings to be granted registration for the Houston Comets mark, the company will need to prove how it plans to use the mark for each class of goods and services in its application. But itâs easier to propose a design for a magnet than it is to show you can host a basketball game.
âCourts and the PTO are often a little suspicious of entities that file intent to use applications if they donât have a demonstrated track record in the field. But of course, every business gets started somewhere,â Tushnet said. âFor a sports team, you would most likely have to show at least that you had realistic plans for launching a sports team. For clothing, which is obviously where a lot of the money is, itâs a little more complicated because pretty much anyone can print stuff on T-shirts. So you would be looking for, is this something that they have a history of doing? Do they have a work flow set up in a way thatâs persuasive to believe they would actually launch this?â
In a motion filed to the trademark office on April 14, the WNBA attorney alleges TSTM Holdings has not met that criteria.
âNotably, TSTM has provided no information to support that it has a legitimate claim to the name of a beloved sports team and the goodwill that WNBAE built and has maintained for a period of nearly thirty years,â the leagueâs attorneys wrote.
âItâs possible that this company never really intended to use the marks, they just filed these applications to get in the way of the WNBA so that they get paid and get bought out,â McKenna said. âBut itâs possible that this will turn out not to be a conflict, because even if the WNBA doesnât win the opposition, in order for these guys (TSTM) to get a registration theyâre going to have to show use of the marks. And if theyâre not ever actually organizing basketball games under the mark, then theyâre not going to be granted the trademark registration.â
If the WNBAâs opposition with the trademark office is unsuccessful, the league could take the fight to the courtroom by suing TSTM Holdings, McKenna said.
It wouldnât be the first time the courts have been asked to resolve a dispute over a defunct sports team name or franchise relocation.
In 1994, as the NFLâs Los Angeles Rams prepared to move to St. Louis, the owner of a Wisconsin cartoon company tried unsuccessfully to claim trademark rights to the St. Louis Rams name because heâd registered a web domain name. In 1993, a New York bar was allowed to keep using the Brooklyn Dodgers name after a judge ruled that the Dodgers and MLB had abandoned the name.
Both of those cases ended up in the federal court system, with Johnny Blastoff, Inc. vs. Los Angeles Rams Football Co. going all the way to the Supreme Court.
Whether the WNBA files a lawsuit depends on what happens with the trademark office registrations and if TSTM Holdings ever uses the Comets mark, McKenna explained.
âThey (the WNBA) canât really sue them for damages at this point because they havenât done anything,â McKenna said. âI could imagine them filing a lawsuit and saying, âYou should enjoin them.â ⊠As soon as this other company gets into the market and actually starts making stuff or starts offering, then that would ripen into a lawsuit and that could go to federal court.â
Game 2: The Las Vegas Aces' Jewell Loyd (24) and A'ja Wilson (22) celebrate after scoring against the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 2: The Las Vegas Aces' A'ja Wilson (22) shoots the ball against the Phoenix Mercury's Alyssa Thomas.
Game 2: The Phoenix Mercury's Kahleah Copper (2) drives the ball past Las Vegas Aces guards Jackie Young (0) and Dana Evans (11).
Game 2: Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22) drives the ball against Phoenix Mercury forward Satou Sabally.
Game 2: Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas (25) shoots a layup against Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22).
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Chelsea Gray (12) celebrates with teammates after the Aces defeated the Phoenix Mercury, 89-86, at Michelob Ultra Arena.
Game 1: Jackie Young #0 of the Las Vegas Aces battles for the ball with Alyssa Thomas #25 and Kahleah Copper #2 of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: Chelsea Gray (12) and A'ja Wilson (22) of the Las Vegas Aces grab a rebound past DeWanna Bonner (14) and Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Jackie Young of the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jewell Loyd (24) looks to tip a loose ball away from Phoenix Mercury guard Sami Whitcomb (33).
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces forward NaLyssa Smith (3) shoots against Phoenix Mercury forward Natasha Mack (4).
Game 1: A'ja Wilson (22) of the Las Vegas Aces celebrates after making a basket against the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Megan Gustafson (17) of the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury looks to shoot the ball against NaLyssa Smith (3) of the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: NaLyssa Smith (3) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts during the third quarter.
Game 1: Chelsea Gray (12) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts against the Phoenix Mercury during the fourth quarter.
Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury drives to the basket against Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jackie Young (0) dribbles against Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper (2).
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jewell Loyd (24) drives against Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper (2).
Game 1: Kahleah Copper (2) of the Phoenix Mercury celebrates after her 3-point basket.
Game 1: Head coach Nate Tibbetts of the Phoenix Mercury looks on during the first quarter.
Game 1: Maddy Westbeld of the Chicago Sky (left) and Rae Burrell of the Los Angeles Sparks look on.
Game 1: Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts in front of Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: Las Vegas Aces head coach Becky Hammon looks on.
Game 1: Dana Evans of the Las Vegas Aces, shoots the ball between Monique Akoa Makani and Natasha Mack of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: A'ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces drives to the basket against Alyssa Thomas of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury grabs a rebound against the Las Vegas Aces.
Game 1: Chelsea Gray of the Las Vegas Aces shoots the ball against Monique Akoa Makani of the Phoenix Mercury.
Game 1: A'ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces grabs a rebound against Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 2: The Las Vegas Aces' Jewell Loyd (24) and A'ja Wilson (22) celebrate after scoring against the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 2: The Las Vegas Aces' Jewell Loyd (24) and A'ja Wilson (22) celebrate after scoring against the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 2: The Las Vegas Aces' A'ja Wilson (22) shoots the ball against the Phoenix Mercury's Alyssa Thomas.
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Game 2: The Phoenix Mercury's Kahleah Copper (2) drives the ball past Las Vegas Aces guards Jackie Young (0) and Dana Evans (11).
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Game 2: Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22) drives the ball against Phoenix Mercury forward Satou Sabally.
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Game 2: Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas (25) shoots a layup against Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22).
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Chelsea Gray (12) celebrates with teammates after the Aces defeated the Phoenix Mercury, 89-86, at Michelob Ultra Arena.
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Game 1: Jackie Young #0 of the Las Vegas Aces battles for the ball with Alyssa Thomas #25 and Kahleah Copper #2 of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: Chelsea Gray (12) and A'ja Wilson (22) of the Las Vegas Aces grab a rebound past DeWanna Bonner (14) and Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Jackie Young of the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jewell Loyd (24) looks to tip a loose ball away from Phoenix Mercury guard Sami Whitcomb (33).
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces forward NaLyssa Smith (3) shoots against Phoenix Mercury forward Natasha Mack (4).
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Game 1: A'ja Wilson (22) of the Las Vegas Aces celebrates after making a basket against the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Megan Gustafson (17) of the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: Satou Sabally (0) of the Phoenix Mercury looks to shoot the ball against NaLyssa Smith (3) of the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: NaLyssa Smith (3) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts during the third quarter.
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Game 1: Chelsea Gray (12) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts against the Phoenix Mercury during the fourth quarter.
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Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury drives to the basket against Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: Alyssa Thomas (25) of the Phoenix Mercury shoots the ball against Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jackie Young (0) dribbles against Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper (2).
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces guard Jewell Loyd (24) drives against Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper (2).
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Game 1: Kahleah Copper (2) of the Phoenix Mercury celebrates after her 3-point basket.
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Game 1: Head coach Nate Tibbetts of the Phoenix Mercury looks on during the first quarter.
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Game 1: Maddy Westbeld of the Chicago Sky (left) and Rae Burrell of the Los Angeles Sparks look on.
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Game 1: Jackie Young (0) of the Las Vegas Aces reacts in front of Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: Las Vegas Aces head coach Becky Hammon looks on.
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Game 1: Dana Evans of the Las Vegas Aces, shoots the ball between Monique Akoa Makani and Natasha Mack of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: A'ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces drives to the basket against Alyssa Thomas of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury grabs a rebound against the Las Vegas Aces.
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Game 1: Chelsea Gray of the Las Vegas Aces shoots the ball against Monique Akoa Makani of the Phoenix Mercury.
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Game 1: A'ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces grabs a rebound against Kahleah Copper of the Phoenix Mercury.
Of course, the WNBA probably hopes it wonât come to that and it wins its opposition case with the trademark office. McKenna said itâs also possible the trademark office grants partial registration to TSTM or asks the company to amend the goods and services in its application.
Tushnet and McKenna said thereâs no telling how long it will take for the trademark office to issue a final decision, which is subject to appeal. In the meantime, Tushnet said, thereâs nothing prohibiting the WNBA from moving forward with reestablishing the Houston Comets team.
The Comets have not yet announced a new logo. The teamâs website, houstoncomets.com, is currently selling season ticket deposits and generic âHoustonâ merchandise featuring the WNBA logo in the leagueâs official colors of orange, black and white.
When the WNBAâs 2026 season tips off on May 8, the Houston team will commence its one-year countdown to launch â and the WNBA will keep fighting to diffuse its trademark time bomb before the clock reaches zero.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Houston Comets' WNBA comeback hits trademark fight with mystery company