This Week in Women’s Basketball: The W is going to The North


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other dignitaries announce the expansion of the WNBA to Canada with a team in Toronto.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert announces the league’s expansion to Toronto. | Nick Lachance/Toronto Star via Getty Images

This week, the WNBA officially announced that a Toronto franchise will join the league in 2026, while another seismic shift arrives in college sports.

Here’s the news you might have missed from around the WNBA and across women’s basketball.


The 6ix is getting Team 14

Several weeks ago, reports emerged that the WNBA was expanding to Toronto, with the league’s 14th franchise expected to debut in 2026. Now, it’s official!

Over at Raptors HQ, Chelsea Leite is on top of all the details about the WNBA’s expansion to Canada.

Keep watching the W

Another week of WNBA action, another viewership record.

Last Saturday’s ABC doubleheader, which featured the Indiana Fever taking on the New York Liberty and the Los Angeles Sparks challenging the Las Vegas Aces, was the most-viewed opening weekend doubleheader in league history, with 1.71 million tuning in for the first game and 1.34 million watching the second.

Augustus named LSU assistant

What a year for Seimone Augustus! And what a coup for LSU!

Recently inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, Augustus will be enshrined in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in August. Then, she’ll head back to her hometown and alma mater in Baton Rouge, joining head coach Kim Mulkey’s staff as an assistant coach for LSU.

An assistant for the Los Angeles Sparks in 2021 and 2022 and a facilitator for Athletes Unlimited the past two seasons, Augustus’ forthcoming stint with LSU seems like another step on her journey to becoming at head coach at the collegiate or WNBA level.

Another seismic shift in college sports

Amateurism is dead. The outdated belief that college athletes should simply play sports for the love of the game, even as they earned millions for the universities they represented, has, finally, expired, as the NCAA and Power 5 conferences settled three anti-trust court cases that not only will grant college athletes backpay damages, but also opens the door for college athletes to be paid directly by their schools through a revenue-sharing model.

If that’s not confusing enough, a myriad of unknowns remain, including how Title IX will apply in the revenue-sharing structure. Stay tuned.

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