
NEW YORK, Dec. 21, 2005 - The WNBA's 10th anniversary season tips off on Saturday, May 20, 2006, the league announced today. The upcoming regular season will be highlighted by a consistent presence on ESPN2 along with an expanded national television playoff package.
ESPN2
will televise 14 games on Tuesdays including five doubleheaders. Coverage on ESPN2
will premier May 23 at 9 p.m. ET with a doubleheader featuring Lindsay
Whalen and the Connecticut Sun visiting the Minnesota Lynx in Game one, followed
by 2005 WNBA MVP Sheryl Swoopes
and the Houston Comets taking on Sue
Bird and the Seattle Storm at Key Arena at 11 p.m. ET.
"The WNBA, ESPN2 and ABC are meeting the growing interest of our fans who desire to see the WNBA brand of basketball on national TV," said WNBA President Donna Orender. "In essence we're delivering appointment viewing for WNBA fans. This consistent package of Tuesday night games on ESPN2, in particular, makes us easily accessible to our fan base."
Tip off of the WNBA 2006 season will include ABC's broadcast of the defending WNBA Champion Sacramento Monarchs as they commemorate their 2005 WNBA title by raising the championship banner prior to squaring off against All-Star guard Diana Taurasi and the Phoenix Mercury at ARCO Arena beginning at 4 p.m. EDT.
Opening day includes the inaugural game of the league's 14th franchise, the Chicago Sky, as it visits the Charlotte Sting. The day also pits the defending Eastern Conference Champion Connecticut Sun versus Becky Hammon and the New York Liberty at Mohegan Sun Arena; and Swin Cash and the Detroit Shock visit Tamika Catchings and the Indiana Fever at Conseco Fieldhouse.
ABC will air six WNBA regular-season games and bookend
ESPN2's coverage. After televising WNBA games nationally on each of the first
three Saturdays of the 2006 campaign, ABC will cap that by airing a pair of games
on the final weekend of the regular season.
ABC's
regular-season coverage includes an exciting matchup between Bill Laimbeer's Detroit
Shock and Mike Thibault's Connecticut Sun on May 27, at 4 p.m. EDT. Lisa
Leslie and the Los Angeles Sparks visit New York to take on the Liberty on
June 3 at 4 p.m. EDT; and Connecticut looks to avenge last season's four-game
series defeat against Sacramento in the first rematch of the 2005 WNBA Finals
at ARCO Arena on July 15 at 4 p.m. Coverage wraps up on the final weekend of the
year as Seattle travels to Houston to take on and the Comets on Aug. 12 at 2 p.m.
EDT. The following day Alana Beard
and the Washington Mystics square off against the Liberty in Madison Square Garden
at 1:30 p.m. EDT.
Broadcast coverage of the postseason will include more first-round games than in 2005. While only four first-round games were aired a year ago, ESPN2 and ABC will combine to televise five and, if necessary, six such games in 2006. Continuing with the league's more consistent presence on ESPN2, every game of the 2006 WNBA Finals will be televised on ESPN2.
Rounding out the television schedule, NBA TV will televise approximately 50 regular season contests. The league's 24-hour television network is available to 67 million homes in the U.S. and in more than 40 other countries.
The 2006 WNBA season concludes on Sunday, Aug. 13, with the playoffs scheduled to begin on Thursday, Aug. 17.
In 2005, the WNBA concluded its ninth season with an action-packed WNBA
Finals that crowned a new champion for the third straight year as the Sacramento
Monarchs defeated the Connecticut Sun. The WNBA Finals on ESPN2 produced significant
increases in ratings (+33 percent) and viewership (+27 percent) versus 2004. As
the preeminent women's professional sports league, the WNBA is the destination
for the best female athletes in the world.