Here are the 23 players headed to Las Vegas for AT&T WNBA All-Star 2019 on July 27 (3:30 ET, ABC).
Elena Delle Donne, Washington Mystics
6th All-Star Selection, Captain
The 2015 WNBA MVP has been voted to each All-Star Game played in her career, including three selections with the Chicago Sky and three with the Mystics. She led Washington to the WNBA Finals last season and Chicago to the Finals in 2014. Delle Donne was the Eastern Conference Player of the Month for June.1 of 23A‘ja Wilson, Las Vegas Aces
2nd All-Star Selection, Captain
The 2018 WNBA Rookie of the Year and top pick in the 2018 WNBA Draft is one of three No. 1 overall picks selected as starters for AT&T WNBA All-Star 2019, along with Griner (2013) and Loyd (2015).2 of 23Liz Cambage, Las Vegas Aces
3rd All-Star Selection, Starter
After a four-year absence from the WNBA (2014-17), the Australian native returned in 2018 and is now an All-Star for the second consecutive season. The league’s 2018 scoring leader made her WNBA All-Star debut as a rookie in 2011.3 of 23Chelsea Gray, Los Angeles Sparks
3rd All-Star Selection, Starter
Gray, who helped the Sparks to a WNBA title in 2016 and a Finals berth in 2017, is an All-Star for the third year in a row. On July 7, she recorded the eighth regular-season triple-double in WNBA history.4 of 23Brittney Griner, Phoenix Mercury
6th All-Star Selection, Starter
The WNBA’s leading scorer (20.0 ppg) and third-leading shot-blocker (2.15 bpg) has been named to each All-Star Game that has been played during her career. Griner recently became only the third player in league history with 600 career blocks, joining Margo Dydek and Lisa Leslie.5 of 23Natasha Howard, Seattle Storm
1st All-Star Selection, Starter
Howard was the WNBA Most Improved Player in 2018, when she helped lead Seattle to a championship in her first season with the team. She was named the Western Conference Player of the Month for June.6 of 23Jonquel Jones, Connecticut Sun
2nd All-Star Selection, Starter
Jones is the reigning Sixth Woman of the Year. In 2017, she made her All-Star debut and earned WNBA Most Improved Player honors.7 of 23Jewell Loyd, Seattle Storm
2nd All-Star Selection, Starter
The 2015 WNBA Rookie of the Year and champion with Seattle last season is one of seven 2019 starters who participated in the All-Star Game last year, along with Cambage, Delle Donne, Gray, Griner, McBride and Wilson.8 of 23Kayla McBride, Las Vegas Aces
3rd All-Star Selection, Starter
McBride is an All-Star for the second year in a row. She will join Las Vegas teammates Cambage and Wilson in playing in front of their home crowd.9 of 23Kia Nurse, New York Liberty
1st All-Star Selection, Starter
The 10th pick in the 2018 WNBA Draft is averaging 16.0 points per game (seventh in the WNBA), up from 9.1 points as a rookie last season.10 of 23DeWanna Bonner, Phoenix Mercury
3rd All-Star Selection, Reserve
The WNBA’s leading scorer (19.4 ppg), Bonner was named to the All-Star Game for the second consecutive season after sitting out the 2017 campaign when she gave birth to twins. A two-time WNBA champion with Phoenix (2009, 2014), Bonner began her career by winning WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year honors three straight seasons (2009-11).11 of 23Tina Charles, New York Liberty
7th All-Star Selection, Reserve
Charles, who this season moved into sixth place in WNBA history with 3,014 rebounds, also ranks 12th with 5,727 points. Earlier this year, she added filmmaker to her resume when the documentary she produced about her father Rawlston Charles and his Brooklyn-based record store and music label debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival.12 of 23Napheesa Collier, Minnesota Lynx
1st All-Star Selection, Injury Replacement for A'ja Wilson
Minnesota rookie forward Napheesa Collier has been named by WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert to replace injured Las Vegas forward A’ja Wilson at AT&T WNBA All-Star 2019. Collier, the sixth pick in the 2019 WNBA Draft, ranks third among rookies in scoring (11.0 ppg), second in rebounds (5.9 rpg) and blocks (1.0 bpg); she leads all rookies and ranks third in the WNBA in steals (1.9 spg).13 of 23Diamond DeShields, Chicago Sky
1st All-Star Selection, Reserve
Chicago’s leading scorer (14.9 ppg), DeShields, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2018 Draft, is one of three Sky guards named to the All-Star Game along with Quigley and Vandersloot.14 of 23Candice Dupree, Indiana Fever
7th All-Star Selection, Reserve
Now in her 14th WNBA season, Dupree recently moved past Lisa Leslie and into sixth place in league history with 6,267 points. She also ranks eighth in career rebounds with 2,880.15 of 23Sylvia Fowles, Minnesota Lynx
6th All-Star Selection, Reserve
The WNBA’s MVP in 2017 and Finals MVP in 2015 and 2017, Fowles became the WNBA’s career leader in double-doubles (158) this season. She also ranks fourth in league history with 3,201 career rebounds, behind only Rebekkah Brunson (3,356), Tamika Catchings (3,316) and Lisa Leslie (3,306).16 of 23Nneka Ogwumike, Los Angeles Sparks
6th All-Star Selection, Reserve
Ogwumike leads the Sparks with 15.5 ppg and 9.5 rpg. The top pick in the 2012 draft, she is one of five No. 1 overall picks in this year’s All-Star Game, along with Tina Charles (2010), Brittney Griner (2013), Jewell Loyd (2015) and A’ja Wilson (2018).17 of 23Allie Quigley, Chicago Sky
3rd All-Star Selection, Reserve
A two-time WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year (2014, 2015), Quigley has earned three consecutive All-Star appearances since becoming a full-time starter for the Sky in 2017. Quigley won the Three-Point Shooting Contest at the 2018 WNBA All-Star Game in Minnesota.18 of 23Odyssey Sims, Minnesota Lynx
1st All-Star Selection, Reserve
After spending the past two seasons with rival Los Angeles, Sims was acquired by Minnesota from the Sparks via a trade in April. The No. 2 overall pick in the 2014 draft, she leads the Lynx with 15.7 ppg and a career-high 5.4 apg and is the only player in the league ranking in top 10 in scoring and assists.19 of 23Alyssa Thomas, Connecticut Sun
2nd All-Star Selection, Reserve
Thomas, who made her All-Star debut in 2017, is the Sun’s No. 2 scorer (11.6 ppg) and rebounder (7.2 rpg) behind Jonquel Jones, an All-Star starter.20 of 23Kristi Toliver, Washington Mystics
3rd All-Star Selection, Reserve
An All-Star for the second consecutive year as a member of the Mystics, whom she helped to the WNBA Finals last season, Toliver also represented the Sparks in the 2013 All-Star Game.21 of 23Courtney Vandersloot, Chicago Sky
2nd All-Star Selection, Reserve
Vandersloot leads the league with 8.2 assists per game a year after she set a WNBA single-season records with 8.6 apg and 258 total assists. She returns to the All-Star Game for the first time since her rookie season of 2011.22 of 23Erica Wheeler, Indiana Fever
1st time All-Star Selection, Reserve
Wheeler is the only undrafted player among the 22 players selected for AT&T WNBA All-Star 2019 and the first undrafted player named to the Game since Erika de Souza in 2014.23 of 23