All-WNBA First And Second Teams

- Ogwumike received First Team votes on all 39 ballots, making her the only unanimous pick from a panel of national and local sportswriters and broadcasters.
- Ogwumike, an All-WNBA Second Team pick in 2014, ranked third in the league in scoring (career-high 19.7 ppg) and rebounding (career-high 9.1 rebounds) and second in double-doubles (18). She shot a WNBA-best 66.5 percent from the field, the second-highest mark of all time, and added career highs in assists (3.1 apg) and blocks (1.2 bpg) to go with 1.3 steals in 33 games.
- 2014 MVP Maya Moore of the Minnesota Lynx received 34 First Team votes and 185 points
- Moore, who finished third in the MVP vote, earned her fourth straight selection to the All-WNBA First Team after helping the Lynx set a franchise record for wins (28). The five-time WNBA All-Star finished fifth in the league in scoring (19.3 ppg) and tied for seventh in assists (4.7 apg)
- 2015 MVP Elena Delle Donne of the Chicago Sky earned 27 First Team votes and 162 points.
- Delle Donne makes her second consecutive appearance on the All-WNBA First team after finishing second in the WNBA in scoring (21.46 ppg) and free throw percentage (93.5). She also averaged 7.0 rebounds, the second best mark of her career, to go with a career-best 1.9 assists.
- 2012 MVP Tina Charles of the New York Liberty received 38 First Team votes and 193 points
- Charles was named to the All-WNBA First Team for the fourth time in her career after leading the WNBA in scoring (21.5 ppg) and rebounding (9.9 rpg), joining Chamique Holdsclaw (2002) and Lauren Jackson (2007) as the only players to lead the WNBA in both categories in the same season. Charles, who finished second in the MVP balloting, also led the league in double-doubles (20).
- Sue Bird of the Seattle Storm garnered 19 First Team votes and 128 points.
- Bird, a five-time First Team selection, led the league in assists (5.8 apg) for the third time in her career, her highest average since 2010. The 14-year veteran also led the league in total assists with 196 in 34 games, 24 more than second. She added 12.8 points while ranking second in the league in three-point field percentage with a career best 44.4.
- The Atlanta Dream forward received 122 voter points. Scored 19.5 points per game, and grabbed a career-high 5.7 rebounds per game
- The 2016 Rookie of the Year, Stewart topped all rookies with 18.3 points (sixth in the WNBA), 9.3 rebounds (second) and 1.9 blocks (third). She became the sixth player in WNBA history to reach all three of those averages in the same season, joining Sylvia Fowles, Yolanda Griffith, Lauren Jackson, Lisa Leslie and Candace Parker.
- The Minnesota Lynx center received 89 voter points. She averaged 13.9 points per game, and grabbed 8.5 rebounds per game.
- The Phoenix Mercury guard received 86 voter points, and averaged 17.8 points per game.
- The second-year Seattle Storm guard earned 48 voter points. She set or tied career highs in every statistical category outside of free-throw percentage.