Lobo, Bird join NBA TV’s Draft Lottery Coverage

NEW YORK, Dec. 1 – Two-time WNBA All-Star Sue Bird, former All-WNBA performer Rebecca Lobo and NBA TV Insiders host Spero Dedes will provide commentary and analysis for NBA TV’s Draft Lottery coverage on Wednesday, December 3 beginning at 8 p.m. ET. The Lottery will determine the top three picks in the 2004 WNBA Draft.

WNBA President Val Ackerman will announce the results of the Draft Lottery live on NBA TV during the pre-game show prior to the Los Angeles Lakers at San Antonio Spurs game. NBA TV will also air live interviews during the Lakers-Spurs halftime show with representatives of the top two finishers in the Lottery, and with University of Connecticut Head Coach Geno Auriemma. The 2004 WNBA Draft will be held in April.

When the Seattle Storm won the Draft Lottery in 2002, they used their No. 1 overall pick on Sue Bird.
Jesse D. Garrabrant
WNBAE/Getty Images
The Seattle Storm made Sue Bird the overall number one pick in the 2002 WNBA Draft after winning the inaugural Draft Lottery on November 13, 2001.

Rebecca Lobo was one of the first players signed by the WNBA in its inaugural season. Both players were college standouts at the University of Connecticut and won NCAA Championships in their senior seasons.

The Draft Lottery will be conducted by WNBA officials and representatives from the accounting firm of Ernst & Young at the NBA Entertainment studios in Secaucus, N.J. and will include the six teams that did not qualify for the 2003 WNBA Playoffs. The Lottery is modeled after the Lottery used in the NBA and is weighted to favor the teams with the poorer records. The Lottery will establish the order of selection for the first round of the draft, with the order of selection for the second and third rounds based on teams’ regular-season finishes in 2003.

The Phoenix Mercury will have the best opportunity to gain one of the top three picks in the draft, since they finished the regular season with an 8-26 record. The Washington Mystics, who finished the season with a 9-25 record, and the San Antonio Silver Stars, who finished its year with a 12-22 mark, have the second and third best chances, respectively, of landing one of the top three picks.

The Draft Lottery will be conducted using 14 numbered ping-pong balls. There are 1,001 possible combinations when four balls are drawn out of 14, without regard to their order of selection. One thousand of those combinations will be assigned to the six non-playoff teams based on their order of finish in the 2003 regular season. The remaining combination will be unassigned.

The 14 ping-pong balls will be placed into a lottery machine and mixed. Four balls will then be drawn to the top. The team that has been assigned that four-ball combination will receive the No. 1 pick. The four balls will then be placed back in the machine, and the process will be repeated to determine the number two and three picks. If the one unassigned combination is drawn, the balls will be placed back in the machine and the process will be repeated until an assigned combination is drawn.

The first-round order of selection for the teams that do not win one of the top three picks will be determined by inverse order of their respective regular-season records.

Following are the chances, out of 1,000, for teams in the WNBA Draft Lottery:

2004 WNBA LOTTERY TEAMS
TeamRecord
Lottery Chances
(out of 1,000)
1. Phoenix 8-26
410
2. Washington 9-25
256
3. San Antonio 12-22
163
4. New York 16-18
73
5. Indiana 16-18
73
6. Seattle 18-16
25