Women's National Basketball Association -
Connecticut Sun
WNBA Comes to Connecticut
NEW YORK (Jan. 28, 2003) -- Connecticut has been
awarded a WNBA team for the 2003 season, it was
announced today by WNBA President Val Ackerman. The new
team, the Connecticut Sun, will be owned and operated by
the Mohegan Sun, which becomes the first non-NBA owner
of a WNBA team. The Connecticut Sun will be the first
independently owned and operated WNBA team and will also
become the first WNBA team to make its home in a non-NBA
market.
"The
WNBA is thrilled to be bringing professional basketball
to a state that perhaps more than any other epitomizes
what women’s basketball can be – competitive, exciting
and supported by knowledgeable and loyal fans,” said
Ackerman. “The Connecticut Sun will be playing in a
world-class facility and will be promoted by a
sophisticated management team that has proven it knows
how to showcase great sporting events.”
The Sun will feature players from the Orlando Miracle
roster, headlined by former University of Connecticut
star Nykesha Sales, who will be making a return to her
home state with the new franchise. The Sun will play its
home games at Mohegan Sun Arena, a state-of-the-art
facility with a seating capacity of 10,000, located in
Uncasville, Connecticut. The Mohegan Sun Arena has
hosted numerous nationally and internationally televised
sports and entertainment events, including pre-season
NBA games, women’s tennis, ice skating, the PBA
Tournament of Champions on ESPN, the Harlem
Globetrotters, and men’s and women’s college basketball
games. The Arena is also a prime location for music
concerts with top entertainers.
"The Mohegan Tribe is proud to bring professional
women’s basketball to Connecticut,” said Mark Brown,
chairman of the Mohegan Tribe. “No other state can
compare with Connecticut in its love and enthusiasm for
women’s basketball, and we’re happy to give fans the
opportunity to see the game played at the highest level,
in an amazing venue.”
The
Mohegan Sun will draw upon a fan base in a tri-states
area, including Connecticut, Rhode Island and
Massachusetts. Management of the Connecticut Sun
includes Mohegan Sun employees Mitchell Etess, Executive
Vice President of Marketing; Paul Munick, Vice President
of Sports & Entertainment; and Chris Sienko, Director of
Sports & Entertainment. Munick’s past experience
includes holding the position of Vice President of
Sports & Family Entertainment at Madison Square Garden
as well as tournament director for the Women’s Tennis
Association’s year-ending Chase Championships. Sienko
previously served as the General Manager for the ABL’s
New England Blizzard.
"Bringing the WNBA to Connecticut demonstrates our
strong commitment to delivering high caliber,
fan-friendly sports and entertainment options to New
England," said Mitchell Etess, Executive Vice President
of Marketing, Mohegan Sun. "Our 9,700-seat arena is a
favorite destination for fans seeking a wide array of
entertainment, concerts and sporting events including
world championship boxing matches, fast-paced
professional and college basketball and hard-hitting
arena football2 games."
Connecticut
fans will be able to welcome a host of former UConn
stars to Mohegan Sun Arena. In addition to Sales, there
are currently 10 former Huskies -- including Sue Bird,
Swin Cash, Tamika Williams and Asjha Jones from the 2002
national championship team -- featured on eight other
WNBA rosters. Additional Huskies in the WNBA include
Rebecca Lobo, Jennifer Rizzotti, Kara Wolters, Rita
Williams, Svetlana Abrosimova and Kelly Schumacher.
The Connecticut Sun joins the WNBA under the league’s
new operating model. In October, the NBA Board of
Governors voted to restructure the WNBA to allow
individual team ownership and non-NBA owners, and to
allow teams to be located in non-NBA markets. The league
will feature 14 teams in 2003, with the Eastern and
Western Conferences comprised of seven teams apiece.
A record 2,362,430 fans attended WNBA games during
the 2002 season, with an average attendance of 9,228
fans, up from 9,075 in 2001. The 2002 WNBA Finals
concluded with the Los Angeles Sparks capturing their
second consecutive WNBA title. The league enters its
seventh season in 2003, with the WNBA All-Star Game
marking its fifth anniversary with a return to Madison
Square Garden on Saturday, July 12. The event will be
held on the weekend for the first time and make its
network television debut on ABC. For more information on
the WNBA, visit
www.wnba.com.
Mohegan Sun, owned by The Mohegan Tribe, is one of
the largest, most distinctive and spectacular
entertainment, gaming, shopping, hotel and meetings
destinations in the United States. Situated in scenic
Southeastern Connecticut, Mohegan Sun is within easy
access of New York, Boston, Hartford and Providence. The
10,000-seat Mohegan Sun Arena hosts major entertainment
and sporting events.
This article was taken from
www.wnba.com. All rights
reserved.
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