The WNBA Board of Governors voted unanimously to approve the Connecticut Sun's relocation to Houston, effective after the 2026 season. The franchise will operate its final Connecticut season in Uncasville's Mohegan Sun Arena before moving to a yet-to-be-announced Houston venue for the 2027 campaign. The vote included approval of the ownership transfer to a Houston-based investment group whose principal names have not been disclosed by the league.
Connecticut entered the WNBA in 1999 as the Orlando Miracle, relocated to Uncasville in 2003, and never missed the playoffs after 2004. The Sun reached five WNBA Finals—most recently in 2022—without winning a championship. Average attendance in 2025 was 7,841, fourth in the league, on a venue capacity of 9,323. The Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority has operated the arena and held the franchise rights since the 2003 move. Mohegan's gaming revenue grew 12% year-over-year in Q4 2025, but the tribe's statement cited "strategic portfolio realignment" rather than financial distress.
Houston becomes the WNBA's 15th market and the only city to host three distinct franchises across league history. The Houston Comets won four consecutive titles from 1997 to 2000 before folding in 2008. A second Houston attempt never materialized past exploratory talks in 2015. The new ownership group inherits a Sun roster that includes three All-Stars from 2025 and a front office led by a general manager whose contract runs through 2027. Player contracts transfer with the franchise under WNBA bylaws, but six Sun players have 2027 free agency or team option clauses that now carry relocation implications.
The move matters because it signals the league's geographic strategy entering its next media rights cycle. WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has stated publicly that expansion to 16 teams by 2028 remains the priority, with San Francisco and Philadelphia the reported frontrunners for the 16th slot. Relocating an existing franchise instead of awarding an expansion team to Houston preserves one expansion fee—rumored at $50 million based on Golden State's 2025 entry terms—while still delivering a Texas footprint to complement Dallas. The Sun's 2025 local TV deal with NBC Sports Boston expires after the 2026 season, leaving no media penalty for the early exit.
Sponsor implications break two ways. Regional brands tied to Connecticut—a regional grocery chain, a Hartford-based insurance carrier—lose a property that delivered 22 nationally televised games in 2025. National partners gain exposure in the fourth-largest U.S. media market, but Houston's prior WNBA failure introduces risk. The Comets folded despite winning; the Sun are moving despite contending. The new ownership group has not yet announced an arena partner, but Toyota Center—home to the NBA Rockets—holds 18,055 seats and sits downtown. Fertitta Entertainment, which owns the Rockets, has not commented on a potential WNBA tenancy, but the timing coincides with Toyota Center's $150 million renovation completion in late 2026.
The Sun's remaining Uncasville season now carries lame-duck optics that complicate ticket sales, suite renewals, and roster construction. The team's vice president of corporate partnerships left for a Liberty role in March, and two assistant coaches are interviewing for head coaching vacancies elsewhere, according to league sources. Meanwhile, Houston civic leaders are already positioning the arrival as a catalyst for a broader women's sports investment push, with Mayor John Whitmire's office citing the NWSL Houston Dash and a Rice University women's basketball program that drew 4,200 fans per game in 2025 as proof of local appetite.
The WNBA's next Board meeting in June will address arena lease terms, local media rights, and whether the franchise retains the "Sun" name or rebrands. Mohegan's exit leaves the league without a tribal gaming partner, a relationship that began in 2003 and included cross-promotional rights across Mohegan's Pennsylvania and New Jersey properties. The new Houston group's funding sources remain undisclosed, but league rules require 75% of ownership equity come from individuals or entities that have passed WNBA vetting. No sovereign wealth or institutional LP stakes have been mentioned.
Connecticut loses a property that generated an estimated $18 million in annual regional economic impact, per a 2024 state commerce study, and a franchise that employed 63 full-time staff in Uncasville. Houston gains a contender rather than an expansion startup, inheriting a roster that posted a 26-14 record in 2025 and a coaching staff led by a two-time Coach of the Year finalist. The 2027 season tips off in 311 days.
The takeaway
Connecticut's exit closes the WNBA's longest-tenured Northeast property and tests whether Houston's third franchise attempt succeeds with inherited talent instead of expansion risk.
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