From College to the W: Which Schools Make History in the League?
Which collegiate program has produced the most players drafted into the WNBA over the league’s 30 years? What about first-round picks? What about No. 1 overall picks? What about players who went on to become league MVPs? How about Finals MVPs?
If you ever see any of those trivia questions, don’t worry. We have the answers to all of them and more!
Schools that have produced the most overall WNBA Draft picks

The two schools at the top of this list should come as no surprise as they have been the preeminent collegiate programs over the 30-year history of the WNBA – the University of Connecticut and the University of Tennessee each with over 45 players drafted into the WNBA.
Geno Auriemma has been at the helm at UConn for the entirety of the WNBA’s existence, beginning his tenure in 1985 and leading the Huskies to 12 NCAA championships. The Connecticut program has sent 52 players to the league and produced some of the best players in WNBA history, highlighted by No. 1 overall draft picks Sue Bird (2002), Diana Taurasi (2004), Tina Charles (2010), Maya Moore (2011), and Breanna Stewart (2016).
The late Pat Summitt led Tennessee until 2012, winning eight national championships and sending plenty of Lady Volunteers to the WNBA. Of the 46 WNBA players drafted out of Tennessee, 29 came during Summitt’s tenure, including a pair of No. 1 overall picks in Chamique Holdsclaw (1999) and Candace Parker (2008).
Below is the list of the top nine schools and one country that have sent the most players to the WNBA via the draft (excluding the 1997 WNBA Elite Draft.)
- UConn: 52 players
- Tennessee: 46 players
- Stanford: 31 players
- Duke: 28 players
- Baylor: 26 players
- Australia: 26 players
- South Carolina: 25 players
- LSU: 25 players
- Notre Dame: 24 players
- Georgia: 24 players
Schools producing the most first-round draft picks

When looking at schools that have delivered the most first-round draft picks, there’s a change from the list of most overall draft picks.
UConn, Tennessee and Stanford remain in first, second and third place, respectively. South Carolina enters the conversation after touting two players in the first round of the 2026 WNBA Draft, bringing their total to 15 to round out the top four. Duke and Baylor are tied for fifth place with 11 players.
- Connecticut: 29 players (last in 2026 – Azzi Fudd, No. 1, DAL)
- Tennessee: 21 players (last in 2024 – Rickea Jackson, No. 4, LAS)
- Stanford: 15 players (last in 2024 – Cameron Brink, No. 2, LAS)
- South Carolina: 15 players (last in 2026 – Madina Okot, No. 13, ATL)
- Duke: 11 players (last in 2018 – Lexie Brown, No. 9, CON)
- Baylor: 11 players (last in 2022 – Queen Egbo, No. 10, IND)
Schools producing the most No. 1 overall picks

UConn holds a commanding lead with seven first-overall picks. South Carolina joins Notre Dame, Stanford, and Tennessee, with two players going first overall and holding a four-way tie for second place.
| SCHOOL | NO. | NAME | YEAR | TEAM |
| UConn | 7 | Sue Bird Diana Taurasi Tina Charles Maya Moore Breanna Stewart Paige Bueckers Azzi Fudd |
2002 2004 2010 2011 2016 2025 2026 |
Seattle Phoenix Connecticut Minnesota Seattle Dallas Dallas |
| South Carolina | 2 | Aliyah Boston A’ja Wilson |
2023 2018 |
Indiana Las Vegas |
| Notre Dame | 2 | Jewell Loyd Jackie Young |
2015 2019 |
Seattle Las Vegas |
| Stanford | 2 | Nneka Ogwumike Chiney Ogwumike |
2012 2014 |
Los Angeles Connecticut |
| Tennessee | 2 | Chamique Holdsclaw Candace Parker |
1999 2008 |
Washington Los Angeles |
Schools with multiple players selected in the first round

Back to trivia time. What was the only occasion in which a school had three players taken with the first three overall picks (1-2-3) in the WNBA Draft?
The answer is the 2016 Draft when UConn teammates Breanna Stewart (No. 1, Seattle), Moriah Jefferson (No. 2, San Antonio), and Morgan Tuck (No. 3, Connecticut) were the first three names called to the stage that night.
There have been four occasions in which the first two players selected came from the same school:
- USC (1997): Tina Thompson (1 / Houston), Pam McGee (2 / Sacramento)
- UConn (2002): Sue Bird (1 / Seattle), Swin Cash (2 / Detroit)
- UConn (2016): Breanna Stewart (1 / Seattle), Moriah Jefferson (2 / San Antonio)
- Oregon (2020): Sabrina Ionescu (1 / New York), Satou Sabally (2 / Dallas)
Just a week after winning the program’s first National Championship, UCLA made history in the 2026 WNBA Draft as the first team to have five first-round selections, and the first with six players selected in one draft. Lauren Betts (No. 4), Gabriela Jaquez (No. 5) and Kiki Rice (No. 6) were taken in a three-pick run, with Gianna Kneepkens (No. 15) closing out the First Round and Charlise Leger-Walker (No. 18) rounding out the Lady Bruins’ six selections in the Second Round.
In 2002, UConn produced four first-round picks when Sue Bird led four Huskies selected with the first six picks in the draft – Bird (No. 1, Seattle), Swin Cash (No. 2, Detroit), Asjha Jones (No. 4, Washington) and Tamika Williams (No. 6, Minnesota).
Seven schools and one country have seen three players selected in the first round of a single WNBA Draft. UConn and South Carolina have seen three players drafted in the first round twice.
- South Carolina
- (2023) Aliyah Boston (No. 1, Indiana), Laeticia Amihere (No. 8, Atlanta), Zia Cooke (No. 11, Los Angeles)
- (2017) Alaina Coates (No. 2, Chicago), Allisha Davis (No. 4, Dallas), Kaela Davis (No. 10, Dallas)
- Oregon
- (2020): Sabrina Ionescu (No. 1, New York), Satou Sabally (No. 2, Dallas), Ruthy Hebard (No. 8, Chicago)
- Notre Dame
- (2019): Jackie Young (No. 1, Las Vegas), Arike Ogunbowale (No. 5, Dallas), Brianna Turner (No. 11, Atlanta)
- UConn:
- (2018): Gabby Williams (No. 4, Chicago), Azurá Stevens (No. 6, Dallas), Kia Nurse (No. 10, New York)
- (2016): Breanna Stewart (No. 1, Seattle), Moriah Jefferson (No. 2, San Antonio), Morgan Tuck (No. 3, Connecticut)
- Tennessee
- (2012): Shekinna Stricklen (No. 2, Seattle), Glory Johnson (No. 4, Tulsa), Kelly Cain (No. 7, New York)
- Oklahoma
- (2002): Stacey Dales-Schuman (No. 3, Washington), LaNeishea Caufield (No. 14, Utah), Rosalind Ross (No. 16, Los Angeles)
- Australia
- (2001): Lauren Jackson (No. 1, Seattle), Penny Taylor (No. 11, Cleveland), Kristen Veal (No. 13, Phoenix)
- Georgia
- (2001): Kelly Miller (No. 2, Charlotte), Deanna Nolan (No. 6, Detroit), Coco Miller (No. 9, Washington)
The NCAA Title / No. 1 WNBA Pick Double

With the WNBA Draft being held just days after the conclusion of the NCAA Basketball Tournament, prospects have a chance to pull off an incredible double – finish their collegiate career by winning the NCAA national championship, then begin their professional career as the No. 1 overall pick in the WNBA Draft.
That feat has been accomplished six times in WNBA history, most recently by Paige Bueckers, who won her collegiate championship at Connecticut on April 6, 2025, and was drafted first overall by the Dallas Wings just eight days later.
- Sue Bird (UConn, 2002) – drafted first overall by Seattle
- Diana Taurasi (UConn, 2004) – drafted first overall by Phoenix
- Candace Parker (Tennessee, 2008) – drafted first overall by Los Angeles
- Tina Charles (UConn, 2010) – drafted first overall by Connecticut
- Breanna Stewart (UConn, 2016) – drafted first overall by Seattle
- Paige Bueckers (UConn, 2025) – drafted first overall by Dallas
Schools that have produced the most WNBA league MVPs

Three schools have produced multiple players to win the WNBA League Most Valuable Player honors. Connecticut leads the way with four players winning MVP, but UConn and USC are tied with 5 total MVP awards.
- USC: 2 players, 5 MVPs – Cynthia Cooper (1997, 1998), Lisa Leslie (2001, 2004, 2006)
- Connecticut: 4 players, 5 MVPs – Diana Taurasi (2009), Tina Charles (2012), Maya Moore (2014), Breanna Stewart (2018, 2023)
- Tennessee: 2 players, 3 MVPs – Candace Parker (2008, 2013), Tamika Catchings (2011)
- South Carolina: 1 player, 4 MVPs – A’ja Wilson (2020, 2022, 2024, 2025)
Schools that have produced the most WNBA Finals MVPs

USC, UConn, and Tennessee are all represented on this list of MVPs as well, but they get some company from LSU and Rutgers, who each produced a pair of Finals MVPs. USC holds the mark for the most Finals MVPs as Cynthia Cooper (1997-2000) and Lisa Leslie (2001-02) combined to win the first six in WNBA history.
- USC: 2 players, 6 Finals MVPs – Cynthia Cooper (1997-2000), Lisa Leslie (2001-02)
- Connecticut: 3 players, 5 Finals MVPs – Diana Taurasi (2009, 2014), Maya Moore (2013), Breanna Stewart (2018, 2020)
- LSU: 2 players, 3 Finals MVPs – Seimone Augustus (2011), Sylvia Fowles (2015, 2017)
- Tennessee: 2 players, 2 Finals MVPs – Tamika Catchings (2012), Candace Parker (2016)
- Rutgers: 2 players, 2 Finals MVPs – Cappie Pondexter (2007), Kahleah Copper (2021)
- South Carolina: 1 player, 2 Finals MVPs – A’ja Wilson (2023, 2025)























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