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DIRECTORY

DIRECTORY
TICKETS
MEDIA INFORMATION
WNBA LEAGUE DIRECTORY
STAFF DIRECTORY
OWNERSHIP
EXECUTIVES
HEAD COACH
ASSISTANTS
SCHEDULE
RADIO AND TV ROSTER
2012 ROSTER
2011 REVIEW AND STATS
SPARKS HISTORY
2011-1997 STATS
PLAYOFFS
TEAM RECORDS
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
OPPONENTS
WNBA HISTORY
WNBA CARES
WNBA TIMELINE

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All WNBA and team insignia depicted in this


publication are the property of WNBA Enterprises,
LLC., and the respective teams and may not be
reproduced for commercial purposes without the
prior written consent of WNBA Enterprises, LLC.
The information contained in this publication was
compiled by the Los Angeles Sparks and is provided
as a courtesy to our fans and the press and may be
used only for personal or editorial purposes. Any
commercial use of this information is prohibited
without the prior written consent of the Los Angeles
Sparks.

tickets

MEDIA INFORMATION
CREDENTIALS
All requests should be made via e-mail to the Sparks Communications Department
at least 24 hours PRIOR to the game you wish to cover. NO CREDENTIAL REQUESTS
WILL BE HONORED ON GAME DAY. Please make certain all requests for credentials are
confirmed by a Sparks representative prior to arriving at STAPLES Center. Credentials
may be picked up at the primary entrance adjacent to 11th street (between Figueroa
and Georgia streets) beginning two hours prior to game time. Credentials must be
worn and visible at all times and are non-transferrable.
CHICK HEARN PRESS ROOM
The Chick Hearn Press Room is located near the primary media entrance adjacent to
11th street on the Event Level. The stairway from the primary entrance as well as the
elevator leads directly to the press room.
PRE AND POST GAME INTERVIEWS
In accordance with WNBA policy, the Sparks and the visitors locker rooms will be
open to members of the media for 30 minutes ending 1 hour before the start of the
game (e.g., media access shall be granted from 5:306:00 P.M. for a 7:00 P.M. game).
Locker rooms are re-opened to the media after the game following a 10-minute
cooling down period and will remain open for 30 minutes. Players and coaches are
available for inter views at those times. Only working members of the press with
valid credentials will be admitted to the locker rooms. ABSOLUTELY NO AUTOGRAPHS
OR PERSONAL PHOTOS ALLOWED DURING MEDIA ACCESS PERIOD.
GAME NOTES AND STATISTICS
Game notes, rosters and stats are available in the press room two hours prior to game
time. Statistics are distributed to the working media at the conclusion of each quarter
as well as first half boxes and final boxes. Post-game notes and quotes are distributed
as quickly as possible following the game.
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Limited space is available for still photographers along each baseline, with exact
locations to be determined on game day. ABSOLUTELY NO TRIPODS ALLOWED.
Photographers must stay in their designated areas, and are asked to be considerate
of print media and fans directly in their viewing area.
MEALS
Beverages and snacks will be available in the press room during the game.

TELEPHONE COMPANY CONTACTS


For lines and instruments, please contact Laura Geery, STAPLES Center
Telecommunications Manager at (213) 742-7246.
RADIO/TELEVISION
Technical Contact
Stacey Mitch, (213) 929-1313 or smitch@la-sparks.com
PRACTICE POLICY
Approximately the final 30 minutes of each practice will be open to the media,
with players and coaches available for brief interviews immediately following
practice. Please contact Stacey Mitch or Bobbi Salcido in the Sparks Communications
Department to confirm practice times, sites and the availability of players and
coaches.
QUICK INFORMATION
Address:
865 South Figueroa St., Suite 104
Los Angeles, CA 90017
(213) 929-1300
Home Court:
STAPLES Center (Opened 1999)
Capacity for WNBA games: 13,154
Primary Practice Facility:
St. Bernard High School
9100 Falmouth Avenue
Playa Del Rey, California 90293
*Please park in the back near the gym parking lot. Meet at the front entrance to the
gym to be escorted inside for practice.
Colors:
Sparks Purple, Gold and Teal
Ticket Prices:
$250, $150, $65, $40, $30, $20, $15
Ticket Outlets:
STAPLES Center Box Office and AXS. Tickets can be purchased by calling 877-44SPARKS (772757) or by visiting the AXS.com.
WEBSITE
www.LASparks.com
FACEBOOK
facebook.com/LosAngelesSparks
TWITTER
@LA_SPARKS

LOS ANGELES SPARKS COMMUNICATIONS


Stacey Mitch
Director, Communications
p: (213) 929-1313
c: (312) 550-9048
smitch@la-sparks.com

Bobbi Salcido
Coordinator, Communications
p: (213) 929-1024
c: (909) 260-8524
bsalcido@la-sparks.com

WNBA LEAGUE DIRECTORY


NEW YORK OFFICE:
Womens National Basketball Association
Olympic Tower, 645 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10022
Main Number: 212-407-8000
www.wnba.com
NEW JERSEY OFFICE:
WNBA Enterprises, LLC
100 Plaza Drive
Secaucus, NJ 07094
Main Number: 201-865-7700
Fax Number: 201-974-1143

STAFF DIRECTORY
PRESIDENTS OFFICE
President: Laurel J. Richie
Chief Operating Officer: Christine Godleski
Administrative Assistant to the President: Donna Collins
BASKETBALL OPERATIONS AND PLAYER RELATIONS
Chief of Basketball Operations and Player Relations: Rene Brown
Senior Director, Basketball Operations: Todd DeMoss
Supervisor of Officials: Dee Kantner
Manager, Player Programs: Bonnie Thurston
Manager, Basketball Operations: David Dorfman
Coordinator, Megan Hughes
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING PARTNERSHIPS
Executive Vice President, Marketing Partnerships: Mark Tatum
Senior Vice President, Marketing Partnerships: Emilio Collins
Senior Vice President, Business Development: Rachel Jacobson
Vice President, Marketing Partnerships: Kelly Flatow
Senior Account Executive, WNBA Marketing Partnerships: Alanna LeGall
TEAM MARKETING & BUSINESS OPERATIONS
Senior Vice President, Team Business Development: Christopher Granger
Vice President, Team Marketing & Strategic Planning: Donna Daniels
Director, WNBA Team Business Development: Dipali Ottaviani
Administrative Assistant, Marketing and Business Development: Scottie Graham
COMMUNICATIONS
Vice President, NBA/WNBA Basketball Communications: Maureen Coyle
Director, WNBA Communications: Ron Howard
Director, WNBA Communications: Dina Skokos
Coordinator, WNBA Basketball Communications: Samantha Tager
MARKETING
Vice President, Marketing: Hilary Shaev
Vice President, Marketing: Melissa Brenner
Vice President, Marketing: Carolanne McAuliffe
Coordinator, Communications: Stuart Winchester
BROADCASTING
Vice President, Broadcasting: Todd Harris
PRODUCTION AND PROGRAMMING
Senior Vice President, Production, Programming and Broadcasting: Daniel Meiseles
Vice President, Production and Programming: Nancy Baldwin
Director, Corporate Services: Barry Carlin
Director, Production and Programming: Kathleen Reidy

INTERACTIVE SERVICES
Director: Patrick Mulrenin
Manager: Darren Misener
Manager: Brian Martin
Senior Coordinator: Jim Reilly
Senior Coordinator: Kevin Scheitrum
Coordinator: Anthony Oliva
LEGAL
WNBA General Counsel: Jamin S. Dershowitz
SECURITY
Director, Security: Kelley Hardwick
FINANCE
Senior Vice President, Finance: Michael Whitehead
Senior Director, Wayne Rappaport
COMMUNITY RELATIONS
Executive Vice President, Community Relations and Player Programs: Kathy Behrens
Senior Vice President, Community Relations and Player Programs: Todd Jacobson
EVENTS & ATTRACTIONS
Executive Vice President, Events & Attractions: Ski Austin
Senior Vice President, Events & Attractions: Kenneth Payne
Senior Vice President, Events & Attractions: Peter Fink
Vice President, Events & Attractions: Lou DiSabatino
Director, Events & Attractions: Andrea Grumet
Manager, Events & Attractions: Kristina Parente
GMG
Vice President, Team Outfitting and Equipment: Christopher Arena
Vice President, Retail Marketing and Development: Brian Keegan
Vice President, Licensing and Business Affairs: Vicky Picca
Vice President, Licensing -- Trading Cards: Lisa Goldberg
Senior Director, Entertainment Products: Anne Hart
Senior Coordinator, Team Outfitting and Identity Assurance: Michael Brady
###

STAFF DIRECTORY

OWNERSHIP
Majority Investor............................................................... Williams Group Holdings LLC
Paula Williams Madison, CEO
Roosevelt Madison

EXECUTIVE STAFF
President.................................................................................................Vinnie Malcolm
Executive Vice President / General Manager..................................................Penny Toler
Director, Communications..........................................................................Stacey Mitch
Director, Finance................................................................................................Ali Zaidi
Director, Marketing....................................................... ...................Christopher Forrest

BASKETBALL OPERATIONS
Head Coach.....................................................................................................Carol Ross
Assistant Coach.....................................................................................Sandy Brondello
Assistant Coach..........................................................................................Bridget Pettis
Special Assistant to General Manager .....................................................Michael Fischer
Equipment Manager................................................................................Thomas Archie
Athletic Trainer.....................................................................................Courtney Watson
Video Coordinator................................................................................Michael McIntyre
Strength and Conditioning Coach................................................................Bruce Deziel

BUSINESS OPERATIONS
Executive Assistant / Office Manager........................................................Angela Bryant
Manager, Marketing.............................................................................Michelle Duncan
Manager, Marketing and Sponsorbhip................................................ .........Tiffany Fan
Manager, Community Relations...............................................................Lauren Bodine
Coordinator, Communications and Community Relations...........................Bobbi Salcido
Manager, Ticket Operations.........................................................................Melissa Korc
Manager, Group Sales ................................................................................Janel Bullard
Senior Account Executive..................................................................................Joe Bucz
Account Executive.................................................................................... .Aminah Mills
Account Executive.....................................................................................Kyle Fujimoto
Account Executive.......................................................................................Gabe Alfred
Account Executive.......................................................................Romela Kurdoglanyan
Account Executive............................................................................................Liz Rizza
Account Executive, Sponsorship............................................................E. Stuart Wright
Account Executive, Sponsorship...................................................................Debbie Ray

GAME ENTERTAINMENT
Game Entertainment Manager...........................................................Conrad Williams
Public Address Announcer......................................................................Maile Proctor
In-Arena Host............................................................................................CJ Simpson
In-Arena DJ.................................................................................................DJ Mal-Ski
Ole Skool Crew Director...........................................................................Traci Hawkins
Sparkids Director...............................................................................Lielel DeGuzman

BROADCAST TEAM
Play-by-Play..............................................................................................Larry Burnett
Color Analyst..............................................................................................Tracy Warren

OWNERSHIP

PAULA WILLIAMS MADISON


Paula Williams Madison is Chairman and CEO of Madison Media Management LLC, a division
of Williams Group Holdings LLC, a Chicago-based investment company wholly owned by her
family. Madison Media Management LLC is a Los Angeles limited liability company which
invests primarily in emerging media, entertainment and communication businesses.
Williams Group Holdings manages its significant investments in media (The Africa Channel), a sports franchise (WNBAs Los Angeles team, The LA Sparks), banking (LAs Broadway
Federal Bank), and various real estate, consumer, financial and trading businesses.
Chairman of The LA Sparks, shes also a member of the WNBA Board of Governors.
Madison recently retired from NBCUniversal, where she had been Executive Vice President
of Diversity as well as a Vice President of the General Electric Company (GE).
During her 22 years with NBCU, she held a number of successful leadership roles, including President and General Manager of NBC4
Los Angeles, Los Angeles Regional General Manager for NBCUs Telemundo TV stations and Vice President and News Director of NBC4
New York.
In 2007, she was appointed to lead diversity for NBCU. It was the first time a company officer assumed a full-time responsibility as
the business-lead for diversity. That same year, Madison was named a Company Officer for GE, then the parent company of NBCU,
now operated by the Comcast Corporation.
After Vassar College, her early career was spent as a newspaper reporter in New York and Texas, then a TV news manager and executive in Dallas, Tulsa and Houston. Finally, she returned to her native New York City as NBC4s Assistant News Director, becoming the
stations Vice President and News Director in March 1996.
Her career as a journalist led to a 1996 Peabody Award for NBC4 New Yorks investigation, A License to Kill. Madisons continued
dedication to quality journalism helped NBC4 Los Angeles earn numerous Emmy, Golden Mike and Regional Edward R. Murrow
Awards.
Honored for corporate leadership and community outreach, Madison was named one of the 75 Most Powerful African Americans in
Corporate America by Black Enterprise Magazine in 2005 and included in the Hollywood Reporters Power 100.
A marathoner, Madison also received the Citizen of the Year Award from the City of Los Angeles Marathon in 2004 and the AntiDefamation Leagues 2003 Deborah Award. Ebony Magazine listed her in the Power 150 in Media.
In 2010, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa appointed her one of five Library Commissioners for the nations second largest
public library system.
Madison is a Board Member of the Friends of the California African American Museum, Greater Los Angeles United Way, the Los
Angeles Library Foundation, Chairman of the California Science Center Foundation, Vice Chair of National Medical Fellowships, the
Center for Public Integrity, the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, the Los Angeles Public Library Commission, Cardinal
Spellman High School, Vassar College Board of Trustees and Chair of The Nell Williams Family Foundation.
A native of Harlem, Madison and her husband Roosevelt reside in Los Angeles.

EXECUTIVES

PRESIDENT
VINNIE MALCOLM
In his first season with the Los Angeles Sparks, Vincent Malcolm brings over 30 years of experience in the areas of media, marketing, corporate sponsorships, television and radio.
Malcolm is also the managing director of The Malcolm Group. Created in February 2008, The Malcolm Group (TMG) provides
consultancy in all areas of media, marketing, corporate sponsorships, branding and business development. TMG has worked on
projects for clients such as Lionsgate Films, USC Athletics, The Africa Channel, Free All Media.com and KDOC-TV among others. In
addition, Malcolm and his wife Paula are the owner/operators of The Shave of Beverly Hills, a mens luxury brand.
Prior to TMG, Malcolm was vice president/general manager of KTLA-TV (CW5), Los Angeles, from March 2004 to February 2008. He was responsible for all aspects of the station.
Before that, he was station manager from 2002 to 2004, and was responsible for overseeing the sales, production, news, engineering and creative services departments, and for
developing the stations strategic and operating plans.
From 1998 to 2002, Malcolm Served as general sales manager at KTLA, responsible for the stations sales and marketing functions, including local and national sales and
research. He was the stations local sales manager from 1994 to 1998, after serving nine months as regional sales manager upon joining KTLA in 1994.
Prior to KTLA, Malcolm held account executive positions at KCAL-TV, Los Angeles, from 1990 to 1994; KIIS-FM, Los Angeles, from 1987 to 1990; and WYNY-FM, New York, from
1983 to 1985. He began his career as a media buyer at Grey Advertising in New York in 1980.
Born August 9, 1958, in Ocho Rios, Jamaica, Malcolm holds a bachelors degree in marketing and advertising from Baruch College in New York. He serves on the board of directors
for the Los Angeles Minority Advertising Training Program, The Los Angeles Urban League, Junior Achievement, and the California Broadcasters Association.

EXECUTIVE VP/GENERAL MANAGER


PENNY TOLER
Entering her 13th season with the Sparks, Penny Toler is the longest standing general manager in the WNBA. She was named
Executive Vice President on October 11, 2012 after serving as Vice President/General Manager since 2010 and general manager for
the past twelve years.Her skill at roster-building bringing some of the most talented female athletes in the world to Los Angeles
and keen sense of basketball operations are complimented by her years as a professional athlete. Through her experience she has assembled the rosters of two back-to-back WNBA
championship teams with the Sparks in 2001 and 2002.
Tolers responsibilities include a variety of duties year-round, with overall attention to the day-to-day management of the team. Her areas of oversight include contract negotiations,
salary cap relations and strategy, and the scouting of collegiate and international players. In addition to those tasks, she also works in various marketing, public relations and other
management capacities.
Toler retired from playing professional basketball in November 1999 with a combined 13 years overseas/WNBA experience to become the second general manager in team history. In
just two years, Toler became the fastest person in any mens or womens professional sports league to win a championship after transitioning from a playing career to general manager.
Toler delivered the first WNBA Championship to the city of Los Angeles by dethroning the four-time WNBA champion Houston Comets (2001).
In her 12 seasons as General Manager, Toler has guided the team to the WNBA Playoffs 10 times (2000-06 and 2008-10), as well as three conference championships in 2001, 2002 and
2003, to go along with the pair of WNBA titles. In an effort to advance the womens game, Toler was a strong advocate in implementing the 24 second shot clock and turning the two,
20-minutes halves into four, 10-minute quarters.
Toler has also been a member of the USA Basketball Womens Competition Committee where she assisted in the selection of three gold medal winning teams: the 2002 World
University Championship games, the 2004 Olympic team and the 2008 Olympic team.
Toler made history again in 2006 when her No. 11 Sparks jersey became the first female athletes jersey to be retired at the STAPLES Center in recognition both of her playing and
management career.
She scored the first basket in WNBA history on June 21, 1997 vs. the New York Liberty, and finished the inaugural season as the Sparks second leading scorer with 13.1 ppg. Toler also
shot 41.7% from three-point range in 1997 ranking her second in the WNBA while she finished fifth in the league in assists at 4.8 per game. Toler again ranked among the league
leaders in assists and three-point accuracy in 1998, and retired after the 1999 season with WNBA career averages of 10.0 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.0 assists in 88 games played.
Toler graduated from Long Beach State University in 1989 where she set several school records including career assists (513) and career free-throw percentage (.795). A member of
two Final Four teams, (1987 and 1988) under Coach Joan Bonvicini, Toler earned Kodak All-America honors, Pacific Coast Athletic Association Player of the Year and Co-Big West Player
of the Year recognition in 1988 and 1989. She scored 2,193 points in three seasons of play at LBSU (sitting out the 1985-86 season after transferring from San Diego State). Tolers
impressive collegiate career was recognized with her induction into the LBSU Hall of Fame in 1995 and a jersey retirement ceremony in 2007 by the 49er Athletics Department.
Beyond the WNBA, Toler combined her sense of community and business savvy and began her Points from Penny program in 1998. The goal of the program is to teach youth in the
Los Angeles and Las Vegas areas the fundamentals of basketball, the importance of teamwork and the value of competition. The program was nominated for several awards during
its tenure, including the American Express Entrepreneurial Spirit Award. Since that time she has focused on bringing the same type of community-oriented programs to the Sparks
front office. For the past six seasons, the Sparks players, coaches and staff have participated in the Academic Skills Basketball Clinic, a program created by Toler that emphasizes the
importance of academics as well as athletic success.
Tolers hobbies include going to the movies, getting interior design tips from HGTV, and working with underprivileged youth and donating to battered womens programs. She also
sits on the Long Beach State Advisory Committee for the Sports Management program. Raised in Washington D.C. with three brothers and four sisters, Toler currently resides in Los
Angeles.

HEAD COACH

CAROL ROSS
After being named the WNBAs 2012 Coach of the Year, Carol Ross
returns for her second season at the helm for the Sparks. With Ross
leadership, the Sparks 24-10 record in 2012, third best in the WNBA,
was an nine-game improvement over the previos year, accounting
for the second-largest turnaround in franchise history. Earning the
second seed in the western conference, Ross and company returned
to the postseason after a year off in 2011 and to the conference
finals for the first time since 2009.
Ross was named Los Angeles Sparks head coach on January 5, 2012,
bringing over 25 years of coaching experience to the STAPLES Center
sidelines.
Before joining the Sparks, she spent three seasons an assistant
coach with the Atlanta Dream, WNBA Finalists in both 2010 and 2011. With Ross joining the staff in 2009, Atlanta enjoyed a 14game turnaround from its inaugural WNBA season in 2008 and finished tied for second in the Eastern Conference. The Dream have
posted 21-13 regular season records in each of the past two years, tying for first in 2011 en route to a second straight WNBA Finals
appearance.
Prior to her tenure in Atlanta, Ross amassed a 324-161 (.668) record in 16 seasons as an NCAA Division I head coach in the highlycompetitive Southeastern Conference, guiding her teams to 12 NCAA Tournaments and two WNIT appearances. Twelve of those
seasons (1990-02) were spent at Florida where she coached current Sparks forward DeLisha Milton-Jones before returning to her
alma mater Mississippi from 2003-07.
During her four-year run at Ole Miss, Ross compiled a 77-50 (.606) record and guided the Lady Rebels to two NCAA Tournaments and
a pair of WNIT appearances. In Ross first season, 2003-04, she led Mississippi back to the Big Dance for the first time since 1995-96
and earned SEC co-Coach of the Year honors. In 2006-07, Ole Miss reached the 20-win plateau for the first time in more than a
decade and advanced all the way to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
Ross also developed a reputation for developing WNBA talent at Florida, where she remains the winningest coach in school history
with a 247-121 (.671) mark over 12 seasons and was a finalist for the Naismith National Coach of the Year in both 2001 and 2002.
The Lady Gators who had never received a bid to the NCAA Tournament before Ross arrival in Gainesville appeared in nine NCAA
Tournaments over her last 10 years. Florida averaged over 20 victories per season during her 12-year tenure, and almost 23 wins
over the last 10 years.
Also active in USA Basketball, Ross has served as an assistant coach with the 2005 Under-19 World Championship team that won the
gold medal as well as head coach of the 1998 USA Womens Select Team that went 7-1.
Ross earned her bachelors degree in Education from Ole Miss in 1982. Ross was a four-year starter for the Lady Rebels from 1978-81,
when Ole Miss logged a 93-50 record. She became the fourth womens basketball player ever to be inducted into the University of
Mississippi Athletic Hall of Fame when she was honored on Sept. 1, 2001.
After earning her degree, Ross served as a volunteer assistant at Belhaven College in Jackson, Miss., for one year before returning to
the SEC as an assistant at Auburn from 1983-90. During that time she advanced from graduate assistant to top assistant and chief
recruiter. She played a key role in the schools development and maturation into a perennial NCAA Tourney team.
The Oakland, Miss., native has served as a board member for both the American Cancer Society and the Coaches vs. Cancer organization, which honored her as its 2000 Coaches vs. Cancer Champion Award winner.

ASSISTANT COACHES

SANDY
BRONDELLO

BRIDGET
PETTIS

Entering her third season on


the Sparks coaching staff is
Sandy Brondello, who boasts
13 total years of WNBA experience as a player and coach and
has also competed internationally at the highest levels.

joining the Sparks coaching staff is Bridget Pettis,


a 12 year veteran of the
WNBA with experience
as a player, coach and
director of basketball
operations.

Brondello came to Los Angeles


after serving as the San Antonio Silver Stars head coach in 2010,
guiding them to a Western Conference Semifinal berth. Previously she served as an assistant in San Antonio for five years
(2005-2009), helping the team earn its first Western Conference
Championship and trip to the WNBA Finals in 2008.

Pettis came to Los


Angeles after serving most recently as director of operations
for the Phoenix Mercury from 2010-11. She served as an
assistant coach for the Mercury from 2006-09 as was apart of
both Mercury WNBA Champinships.

A WNBA veteran, she played five seasons with the Seattle Storm
(2003), Miami Sol (2001-02) and the Detroit Shock (1998-99),
averaging 11.4 points and 2.3 assists in 155 career games.
Brondello played in the inaugural WNBA All-Star Game in 1999,
and ranks fourth in league history with her 41.0% career threepoint percentage.
The native Australian played for the Australia National Team for
18 years and is a four-time Olympian. She is a two-time silver
medalist (2000 and 2004) and took home a bronze medal at
the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. She also represented Australia
at the 1988 Olympics, while in 1992 Brondello was named the
Australian International Player of the Year. She helped Australia
bring home the bronze medal from both the 1998 and 2002 FIBA
World Championships and also competed at the 1994 and 1990
World Championships and the 1990 Goodwill Games.
Prior to playing in the WNBA, Brondello played in the Womens
National Basketball League (WNBL) in Australia from 1986-96,
earning league MVP acclaim in 1995. She also played in Germany for BTV Wuppertal from 1992-2002, helping the team win
10 German Cup Championships. In 1996, Brondello was named
the European Cup MVP after leading Wuppertal to the European
Cup title and earned three European Cup All-Star selections1994,
1996 and 1997.
Brondello earned a degree in teaching from the University of
Western Sydney in 1990. She and her husband Olaf Lange a
veteran basketball coach who served alongside Brondello in
San Antonio have a five-year-old son, Brody Max Lange, and
welcomed Jayda Grace Lange to their family on May 31, 2010.

Her career in Phoenix began when she was selected in the


first round (seventh overall) of the 1997 WNBA Draft as an
original member of the inaugural Mercury team. She was the
first player in Phoenix history to score a point for the Mercury.
Pettis played for the Mercury from 1997 to 2001 and 2004
to 2006 and spent two seasons in Indiana with the Fever
(2002 to 2003). During her first two seasons with Phoenix,
she started 56 of 58 games, averaging over 11 points in both
seasons (11.3ppg, 1998;12.6 ppg, 1997). During her eightyear career, she played in 228 games (71 starts), totaling
1,408 career points.
In addition to her WNBA career, Pettis played 14 years internationally in Italy, Turkey and Spain. She played collegiately
at the University of Florida from 1991-93. She still holds the
Gator record for most made three pointers in a game, with
the 8 she made against Georgia on January 20, 1993.

RADIO AND TV ROSTER

#0
ALANA BEARD
5-11/160
DUKE
10th WNBA Season (8th Playing)

#1
ADIA MATHIES
5-9
KENTUCKY
Rookie

#3
CANDACE PARKER
6-4/175
TENNESSEE
6th WNBA Season

#6
JENNA OHEA
6-1/174
AUSTRALIA
3rd WNBA Season

#10
LINDSEY HARDING
5-8/173
DUKE
7th WNBA Season

#13
FARHIYA ABDI
6-2
SWEDEN
Rookie

#16
EBONY HOFFMAN
6-2/215
USC
10th WNBA Season

#20
KRISTI TOLIVER
5-7/130
MARYLAND
5th WNBA Season

#25
MARISSA COLEMAN
6-1/160
MARYLAND
5th WNBA Season

#30
NNEMKADI OGWUMIKE
6-2/175
STANFORD
2nd WNBA Season

#42
JANTEL LAVENDER
6-4/220
OHIO STATE
3rd WNBA Season

Pronnunciation Guide
Adia Mathies......ODD-ee-uh MATH-is
Farhiya Abdi......PHI-ee-uh
Jantel Lavender......Jan-TEL
Nnemkadi Ogwumike............Oh-gwoo-MIH-kay

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE :
Four-time WNBA All-Star (2005-07, 2009), starting the latter three games
2006 Second Team All-WNBA
Earned WNBA All-Defensive Team honors five times (First Team in 2007,
Second Team in 2004-06 and in 2009)
All-time steals leader in Washington Mystics history

2012 (Los Angeles): Played all 34 games, starting 33 contestsAveraged 11.4 points, 3.3 assists and 2.2 rebounds in 30.8 minutesTallied
a career-high 10 assists and season-high 23 points at San Antonio on June 16Led the Sparks with 66 steals Tied for second in assists (with
Candace Parker)Recorded her 400th career steal against Seattle on August 18thFinished the season ranked 6th among league leaders in
steals (2.00)One of five Sparks players to average double digits in scoring...Averaged 16.5 points, 3.5 assists, 2.3 rebounds and 1.8 steals in
four playoff games...Tallied 18 points, 3 assists and 2 steals in her first postseason game with the Sparks (vs. San Antonio Sept. 27, 2012).
2011 (Washington): Missed the 2011 season with a foot injuryCurrently playing the 2011-12 WNBA off-season in Israel as a member of
Elitzur Ramla.
2010 (Washington): Season Missed the 2010 season due to ankle surgery in the off-season.
2009 (Washington): Named as a starter in the WNBA All-Star gamestarted 30 gamesled the team and ranked tenth in the league
in scoring (15.9)recorded a career-high and ranked fifth in the league in total steals (72) en route to WNBA All-Defensive Second Team
honorsranked third in the league in steals per game (2.32)ranked eight in the league in total field goals made (188)
2008 (Washington): Started 33 gamesScored a career-high 33 points against defending champion Phoenix Mercuryled the team in
points (532) for the fourth consecutive year and assists (117)recorded a team-high 55 stealsFinished the season ranked 8th in steals (1.67)
and minutes played (1092), 12th in points per game (16.1) and 15th in assists per game (2.8).scored in double figures 25 times and led the
team in scoring 15 of those timesRecorded her 2,500th point against the Connecticut Sun (7/27/08)
2007 (Washington): Earned her third consecutive WNBA All-Star game appearance and second consecutive All-Star startNamed to the
WNBA All-Defensive First TeamMissed one game with a shoulder injurystarted 33 gamesLed the team in minutes (35.4)Led the
team in points (18.8) and steals (1.94)shot a career high 84.7% from the free throw lineNamed WNBA Eastern Conference Player of the
Week for games played August 12th through 19thFinished the season ranked 4th in the league in Points per game (18.8), 2nd in minutes
per game (35.4), 3rd in minutes played (1,169), 4th in total points (622.0), 4th in the steals per game (1.94), 3rd in field goals made (224.0)
Led the team in scoring in 20 gamesScored a season high 29 points in a game against the Phoenix Mercury (6/20/07)Led the team in
total points (622)Surpassed the 2,000 career point mark in a game against the Seattle Storm (8/11/07)grabbed 500th career rebound in a
game against the Houston Comets (7/18/07)
2006 (Washington): Had a breakout seasonNamed a starter for the Eastern Conference All-Star teamEarned Second Team All-WNBA
recognitionNamed to her third consecutive WNBA All-Defensive Teamaveraged 31.1 minutes a gameShot a career-high 49.5% from
the fieldhad a career-high in numerous categories including rebounds (149), assists (98) and points (614)scored a career high 30 points

ALANA
BEARD

ALANA BEARD

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
in a game against the Seattle Storm (7/23/06)had a
HEIGHT
career high 9 assists against the Sacramento Monarchs
WEIGHT
(8/5/06)averaged a team-high 19.1 points per
DATE OF BIRTH
game.led the team in steals (1.84 spg) missed
COLLEGE
two games due to an ankle sprainfinished the season
YEARS PRO
ranked 6th in both scoring and stealsrecorded her first
double-double against Indiana on June 27th, with 24
points and 10 reboundsNamed to the USA Basketball
Womens World Championship teamsurpassed 1000
career points (1,482)Playoffsaveraged 32.0 mpgaveraged 15 ppg and 5.0 rpg

Guard
511
160
May 14, 1982
Duke
8

2005 (Washington): Named to the Eastern Conference All-Star teamNamed to the WNBA All-Defensive Second TeamPlayed a career-high 48
minutes in a double overtime win against the Indiana Fever (6/18/06)...averaged 33.8 mpgled the team in scoring with 14.1 points per game
recorded a career-high seven steals in a win against San Antonioled the team in scoring in 13 gameswas second on the team in assists (3.0 apg)
and steals (1.5 spg)finished the season ranked 9th in scoring and 10th in minutes per games (33.8)
2004 (Washington): Named to the WNBA All-Defensive Second Team .Set a new Mystics record for most total steals in a season (69)Averaged
22.5 ppg during the teams last six games of the seasonwas a candidate for Defensive Player of the year as well as Rookie of the Yearfirst rookie
in two years to be named player of the week for games played September 7 through September 12Started in all 34 regular season games averaging
30.1 mpgaveraged 13.1 ppg while shooting 41.8% from the field and collected 4.2 rpgLed the team in assists (2.7) and steals (2.0)set a new
Mystics record for most total steals in a season (69)In addition to leading the team in steals and assists, led the team in various categories including
minutes (30.1) and blocked shots (1.00) was the high scorer 15 games during the seasonPlayoffsled the team with 16.7 points, 3.0 rebounds,
2.0 steals, and 2.67 blocks per game
College: First woman to win the John R. Wooden, State Farm Wade Trophy and Naismith Player of the Year Awards... Dukes first National Player of the
Year and three-time ACC Player of the YearFirst woman at Duke University to have her number raised to the rafters.
Personal: Full name is Alana Monique Beard...Born May 14, 1982, in Shreveport, La...Daughter of LeRoy and Marie Beard...Has a Yorkshire terrier,
Chloe...Ambassador for WNBAs Dribble to Stop Diabetes campaign...Through the Alana Beard Foundation she sponsors seven girls AAU basketball
teams which foster a no-excuse environment to provide the young women of tomorrow with the necessary resources critical to achieving success on
or off court.
Transactions: Signed as an unrestricted free agent with the Los Angeles Sparks on Feb. 8, 2012...Selected in the first round (2nd overall) of the 2004
WNBA Draft by the Washington Mystics on April 17, 2004.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2004-WAS 34 1,025 159 380 .418 21
56 .375 107 149 .718 28 115 143 4.2 91 2.7 98
69 34 446 13.1
2005-WAS 30 1,015 155 408 .380 32
101 .317 80 105 .762 25 105 130 4.3 90 3.0 87
45 9
422 14.1
2006-WAS 32 1,000 232 469 .495 37
102 .363 113 149 .758 23 126 149 4.7 98 3.1 92
59 25 614 19.2
2007-WAS 33 1,169 224 539 .416 47
146 .322 127 150 .847 25 114 139 4.2 99 3.0 105
64 24 622 18.8
2008-WAS 33 1,092 187 474 .395 51
144 .354 107 146 .733 4 114 118 3.6 117 3.5 111
55 19 532 16.1
2009-WAS 31 985 188 438 .429 32
107 .299 84 114 .737 19 104 123 4.0 68 2.2 97
72 18 492 15.9
2012-LAS 33 1,017 137 314 .436 35
87 .402 66 83 .795 10 61 71 2.2 109 3.3 91
66 13 375 11.4
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals
226 7,304 1,282 3,022 .424 255
743 .343 684 896 134 134 739 873 3.9 672 3.0 681
430 142 3,50315.5

FARHIYA ABDI

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
62
May 31, 1992
Sweden
Rookie

BIOGRAPHY

2012 (Czech Republic): Played 32 games with Frisco SikaAveraged 14.5


points, 7.0 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 2.2 steals and 30.5 minutes per game
Played 13 games with IMOS Brno (Euroleague)Averaged 8.2 points, 5.8

rebounds, 1.1 steals and 31.2 minutes.


Personal: Born and Raised in Sweden
Career Transactions: Drafted as the 13th overall pick in the 2012 WNBA DraftSigned a multi-year contract with the Sparks
on April 17, 2012.

FARHIYA
ABDI

BIOGRAPHY
2012 (Los Angeles): Played in all 34 games, starting twoAveraged 3.1
points, 2.6 rebounds and 1.1 assists per gameHad a season-high four
assists and four steals at Atlanta on June 15Shot 90.0 percent from the foul
line (18-20)Played in all four playoff gamesAveraged 2.0 points in 7.8
minutes through four postseason contests.
2011 (Washington): Ranked eighth in the league in three-point field goal
attempts (144)Ranked 10th in the league in three-point field goal attempts
(53)Started 28 games, averaging 27 minutes per tiltscored 8.6 points per
gamegrabbed 4.8 rebounds per gameOn July 20 against the Atlanta Dream, scored a career high 21 points, connecting on
eight shots from the field, also a career high... Tied her personal of 14 field goal attempts and also scored 5-for-8 from three
point range vs. the Dream, with five attempts a new career highIn a 20-point win over the Tulsa Shock on June 26, Coleman
posted her first double-double of the season, contributing 13 points and grabbing a career high 12 rebounds in a win that
snapped a four-game losing streak.
2010 (Washington): Played in all 34 gamesEarned the first start of her career on May 30 against the Connecticut Sun where
she played 30 minutes, scored seven points, grabbed four rebounds, dished out two assists, and had one stealposted her
first career double-double on August 1 against Tulsa, scoring a season high 14 points and tying her season and career high in
rebounds with 10 boardsranked ninth in the league in three-point field-goal percentage (.402).
2009 (Washington): Saw action in 28 gamesankle injury Coleman sidelined for six consecutive gamesposted a seasonhigh 16 points in the regular season opener against the Connecticut Sun (6/6)also scored a season-high of four threepointers against the Connecticut Sun (6/6)...averaged 18.8 minutes and 6.1 points in her rookie season
College: Named All-American by the WBCA, USBWA and Associated Press (second team) as a seniorfour-time ACC Player
of the Weeknamed first team All-ACC selection and ACC Tournament MVP...Became first player in ACC history with 2,000
points, 1,000 rebounds, 400 assists, 200 steals, and 100 blocksSecond leading scorer (2,205) and rebounder (1,139) in
school historyWBCA Player of the Month (March 2009)Averaged 18.1 points and 8.6 rebounds per game as a senior
In 2009 Set a Maryland record with her 42-point performance, the most points in Sweet 16 history, with 15 rebounds in 40
minutes during the teams come-from-behind victory over Vanderbilt in the Sweet 16...Helped lead the Terrapins to the first
NCAA Championship in school history in 2005-06.

MARISSA
COLEMAN

MARISSA COLEMAN

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
61
160
January 04, 1987
Maryland
4

Personal: Enrolled in the College of Letters & Sciences...daughter of Joni and Tony Coleman...has a sister, Tonya, and a brother,
Anthony...chose Maryland over Duke, Connecticut, Tennessee, and Florida...born in Portland, Ore.
Transactions: Traded to the Los Angeles Sparks on Feb. 1, 2012 in exchange for Noelle Quinn...Drafted second overall by the
Washington Mystics inthe 2009 WNBA Draft.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2009-WAS 28 525 54 159 .340 29
80 .362 34 45 .756 22 54 76 2.7 22 0.8 44
20 9
171 6.1
2010-WAS 34 663 75 189 .397 41
102 .402 31 41 .756 25 87 112 3.3 50 1.5 67
29 12 222 6.5
2011-WAS 34 918 107 278 .385 53
144 .368 25 37 .676 46 118 164 4.8 47 1.4 80
24 14 292 8.6
20012-LAS 34 548 37 116 .319 14
55 .255 18 20 .900 24 63 87 2.6 36 1.1 44
21 8
106 6.1
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals
130 2,654 273 742 .368 137 381 .360 108 143 .755 117 322 439 3.4 155 1.2 235
94 43 791 6.1

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE
2010 WNBA All-Star selection
2007 All-Rookie Team selection
WNBA Career Notes: Averaging 11.2 points and 4.2 assists per game in six
seasons in the WNBA First player from the class of 2007 to score 2,000 career
points ... Started every game in two seasons with the Mystics in 2009 and 2010
Appeared in all 34 games for the Dream in both 2011 and 2012.
2012 (Atlanta): Played in all 34 games, including 32 starts ... Named WNBA
Eastern Conference Player of the Week for the Week of Sept. 3-9 Averaged 12.3 points, 4.5 assists and 2.8 rebounds ... Led
the team and ranked eighth in the WNBA in assists ... Led the team and 20th in the WNBA in free throw percentage at a careerbest 81.8 percent (90-of-110) ... Sixth in the WNBA in assist/turnover ratio at 2.19 ... Scored in double digits in each of the first
five games and 22 of 34 overall ... Averaged a team-high 19 points while adding 5.3 assists and 4.7 rebounds per contest in
Atlantas three playoff games against Indiana.
2011 (Atlanta): Appeared in all 34 games, including 33 starts ... Averaged 10.5 points, 3.2 rebounds and 4.8 assists in her
first season in Atlanta ... Led the team in assists (4.8 apg) and minutes (30.5 mpg) ... Set career-high in assists (4.8 apg) and
field goal percentage (0.455) ... Scored a season-high 25 points against the New York Liberty on 6/30/2011 ... Tied her careerhigh with 10 assists against the Tulsa Shock on 9/4/2011 ... Started all eight postseason games, averaging 14.5 points and 5.9
assists per game.
2010 (Washington): Started all 34 games for the Mystics Earned first WNBA All-Star selection Helped the Mystics
to the Eastern Conference regular season title Averaged 12.1 points, 3.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists per game Led team
in assists per game and ranked third in scoring Ranked third in the WNBA in minutes played (1130.0 minutes) Ranked
12th in the WNBA in assists per game (4.0 apg) Scored a career-high 33 points against Indiana on July 30 Appeared in
two playoff games, averaging 10.5 points, 2.5 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game.
2009 (Washington): Started all 34 games Averaged 12.8 points, 4.0 rebounds and 4.5 assists per game Finished
second on the team in scoring and first in assists per game Ranked first in the league in total minutes played (1194) and
minutes per game (35.1) Scored a then-career high 27 points against the Minnesota Lynx Ranked seventh in the
league in assists per game (4.5) Appeared in two playoff games, averaging 10.5 points, 2.5 rebounds and 4.0 assists per
game.

LINDSEY
HARDING

LINDSEY HARDING

2008 (Minnesota): Started 11 of 24 games


Averaged 6.4 points per game and 3.2
assists per game Dished out a careerhigh 10 assists against the Seattle Storm
(September 6, 2008) Ranked 19th in
the WNBA in assists per game (3.2 apg)
Recorded a career-high 10 assists against
Seattle on September 6.

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
58
173
June 12, 1984
Duke
6

2007 (Minnesota): Appeared in 20 games


as a rookie, including 19 starts Missed the
final 14 games after suffering a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee July 10 at Washington (underwent surgery on July 20)
Averaged 11.6 points, 4.4 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game Recorded double-digits in scoring 15 times Finished runnerup to Chicagos Armintie Price in Rookie of the year voting Named to the 2007 WNBA All-Rookie Team.
College: 2007 National Player of the Year Two-time ACC Defensive Player of the Year Only the second player in school history
to register over 1,000 points, 500 assists, 500 rebounds and 250 steals Only the second womens basketball player in school
history to have her jersey retired.
Personal: Born in Houston, TX. Majored in sociology along with a markets & management certificate and a minor in theater
studies and womens studies at Duke University Only the second Duke womens basketball player to have her jersey retired
Studied acting in Los Angeles during the 2010-11 offseason Member of the 2009-12 USA Basketball Womens National Team.
Transactions: Selected with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2007 WNBA draft by the Phoenix Mercury and traded to the Minnesota
Lynx in exchange for Tangela Smith Acquired by the Washington Mystics via trade with the Minnesota Lynx in exchange for 2009
first and second round draft picks Acquired by the Atlanta Dream in a sign-and-trade deal on 2011 draft day in exchange for Kelly
Miller, the Dreams No. 8 pick (TaShia Phillips) and a first round pick in 2012. The Dream also received the Mystics second round pick
in 2012...Signed a free agent contract with the Sparks on Feb. 5, 2013.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2007-MIN 20 602 86 243 .354 8
35 .229 53 78 .679 15 72 87 4.4 78 3.9 44
20 6
233 11.6
2008-MIN 24 591 51 139 .367 2
25 .080 50 72 .694 9 47 56 2.3 76 3.2 56
27 4
154 6.4
2009-WAS 34 1,194 163 375 .435 20
62 .323 89 119 .748 24 111 135 4.0 154 4.5 68
43 13 435 12.8
2010-WAS 34 1,130 157 353 .445 15
52 .288 82 107 .766 17 86 103 3.0 137 4.0 67
47 6
411 12.1
2011-ATL 34 1,037 141 310 .455 10
33 .303 66 90 .733 17 92 109 3.2 162 4.8 60
34 6
358 10.5
2012-ATL 34 1,040 157 369 .425 14
58 .260 90 110 .818 16 79 95 2.8 153 4.5 47
46 7
418 12.3
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals:
180 5,595 755 1,789 .422 69
265 .260 430 576 .747 98 487 585 3.3 760 4.2 342
217 42 2,009 11.2

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE
2007 WNBA Most Improved Player WNBA
Player her 250th WNBA game on Aug. 3, 2011
Career Highlights: Has amassed 1,799 career points and 1299 career
rebounds in her nine seasonsReached the 2009 WNBA Finals with the
Indiana Fever, as well as three Eastern Conference FinalsSouthern California
native and USC alum has returned home to play for the Los Angeles Sparks.
2012 (Los Angeles): Played 20 gamesAveraged 2.5 points, 2.1 rebounds and 10.4 minutesTallied a season-high 9
points vs. San Antonio on Aug. 23.
2011 (Los Angeles): Averaged 7.5 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.1 assists while starting 16 of 34 games in her first season with
the SparksSeason-best 24 points on July 26 at Minnesota were two-shy of her career highScored a game-high 21 points
against her former team to help the Sparks beat the Fever on Aug. 18 Led all scorers with 21 points on July 5 against the
MercuryRegistered six points and nine boards in her Sparks debut on June 3 vs. the LynxEclipsed 1,500 points for her
career on June 3 against the LynxPlayed her 250th career WNBA game on Aug. 3Playing with Besiktas of the Turkish
League during the 2011-12 off-season.
2010 (Indiana): Averaged 8.0 points and 4.2 rebounds while helping lead the Fever to the Eastern Conference Semi-finals
Ranked 18th in the WNBA in Steals Per Turnover (0.8)Started 33 of 34 contestsLeft Indiana ranked second in franchise
history in rebounds (1,112).
2009 (Indiana): One of just two Fever players to start all 34 games, Hoffman averaged 9.9 points, 5.9 rebounds, 1.68 steals
and 1.5 assists per gameOn June 26 at New York, Hoffman had 17 points and tied a career-high with 14 reboundsLed the
Fever with a career best 89.6 percent shooting from the free-throw lineRanked fifth in the WNBA in free throw percentage
and she was ninth in the WNBA in stealsPosted a career-high 57 steals to help Indiana become the first team in league
history with four players to post 50+ steals.
2008 (Indiana): Averaged 10.4 points and a team-leading 7.8 rebounds per game while earning the WNBA Most Improved
Player Award Registered career-highs in points, rebounds, assists and steals per gameFinished fifth in the WNBA in
rebounding average (7.8) and second with a 45.6 percent 3-point shooting percentage.
2007 (Indiana): Averaged 4.2 points and 4.0 rebounds per game playing in all 34 contestsStarted 10 gamesIn 24
games off the bench, she averaged 4.8 ppg and shot nearly 50 percent (.494) from the floorBlocked 16 shots, including nine
in the last 10 games.

EBONY
HOFFMAN

EBONY HOFFMAN

PERSONAL FACTS
2006 (Indiana): Started 33 of 34 games
while averaging 6.4 points and 5.7 rebounds
per contest...Recorded the first double-double
of her career with a 13-point, 13-rebound
effort while coming off the bench in the
season opener against Detroit on May 20...
Started every game thereafter, and nearly
doubled her point and rebound production
from either of her previous seasons.

POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
62
215
August 27, 1982
USC
9

2005 (Indiana): Averaged 15.1 mpg and played in 33 games while averaging 3.6 ppg and 2.9 rpg...Saw her playing time increase as
she provided consistent relief of Natalie Williams in the post...Scored a career-high 16 points in the Fevers overtime win vs. Detroit,
6/15...Added a season-high seven rebounds to lead the Indiana bench against the Shock.
2004 (Indiana): Played in 30 games as a rookie while averaging 2.0 ppg and 2.9 rpg...Started 13 games...Ranked fifth in the WNBA
with an average of 10.4 rebounds per 40 minutes second among all rookies.
College: As a senior in 2003-04, led USC in scoring (14.7 ppg) and rebounding (8.1 rpg)...Earned her second-straight Kodak/WBCA
All-Region honor, as well as her third-straight All-Pac-10 First Team honorIn 2002-03, averaged a team-leading 16.3 ppg, 9.8 rpg,
2.3 spg and 1.1 bpg...Posted 2.3 apg and shot 76.0 percent from the line. 2001-02, She led the team with 8.9 rpg, 1.3 bpg and 2.4
spg...Finished second on the team in scoring, averaging 14.9 ppg on 45.2 percent FG shooting... As a freshman in 2000-01, started 26
of 28 games...Led the team in scoring (12.5 ppg) and rebounding (8.0 rpg) - the first USC freshman to do so since Lisa Leslie in 1991.
Personal: Full name is Ebony Vernice Hoffman...Married Ronald Cass on Oct. 20, 2007, in Los Angeles, with former teammate
Tamika Catchings as her maid of honorThe daughter of Floyd and Marsha HoffmanHas one sister, Erika, and one brother, Elliot,
whom she refers to as her inspiration and motivation to excel on the basketball court...Commonly known as Big Dog.
Transactions: Was selected in the first round (ninth overall) by the Indiana Fever in the 2004 WNBA Draft. Signed as a free agent
with the Los Angeles Sparks in February 2011.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2004-IND 30 335 26 83
.313 5
7
.294 3
4
.750 34 53 87 2.9 21 0.7 51
15 5
60 2.0
2005-IND 33 497 47 116 .405 1
2
.500 25 30 .833 34 63 97 2.9 16 0.5 59
21 10 120 3.6
2006-IND 34 854 82 208 .394 0
8
.000 54 70 .771 73 120 193 5.7 46 1.4 104
37 16 218 6.4
2007-IND 34 582 57 128 .445 2
5
.400 28 34 .824 40 97 137 4.0 26 0.8 69
21 18 144 4.2
2008-IND 33 1,013 141 303 .465 26
57 .456 34 41 .829 94 164 258 7.8 61 1.8 121
47 26 342 10.4
2009-IND 34 1,005 122 313 .390 25
72 .347 69 77 .896 56 143 199 5.9 52 1.5 106
57 12 338 9.9
2010-IND 34 815 106 267 .397 26
82 .317 34 40 .850 44 100 144 4.2 43 1.3 91
40 13 272 8.0
2011-LAS 34 752 97 222 .437 24
56 .429 38 45 .844 44 98 142 4.2 37 1.1 77
36 9
256 7.5
2012-LAS 20 208 18 52
.346 5
19 .263 8
10 .800 13 29 42 2.1 9
0.5 30
13 1
49 2.5
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals
286 6,060 696 1,692 .411 114 318 .358 293 351 .835 432 867 1,299 4.5 311 1.1 708
287 110 1,799 6.3

BIOGRAPHY
2012 (Los Angeles): Played 34 games, starting one contestAveraged
5.6 points, 3.9 rebounds and 0.5 assistsScored a season-high 16 points vs.
Washington on June 18Established a new career-high in defensive rebounds
(9) and a season-high 11 total rebounds vs. San Antonio on June 16Played
all four postseason gamesAveraged 1.8 points, 2.3 rebounds and 10.0
minutes Set playoff highs in points (7), rebounds (5) and assists (2) in Game
2 of the Western Conference Semi-Finals at San Antonio.
2011 (Los Angeles): Averaged 6.6 points and 3.1 rebounds during her rookie
campaign, registering 11 double-digit scoring efforts and making three startsPair of double-doubles, 25 points and 10
rebounds at Phoenix on Aug. 12 and 19 points, 12 boards vs. Tulsa on Sept. 9Second-most double-dips among all WNBA
rookiesNearly tallied a third with 21 points, nine boards during July 9 game at SeattleShot an even .500 on the season,
second-highest field goal percentage on the teamSelected in the first round, fifth overall of the 2011 WNBA Draft by the
Sparks.
College: Lavender attended Ohio State where she was the only player, male or female, to be selected Big Ten Conference
Player of the Year four straight seasons (2007-08 through 2010-11)Scored in double-figures in each of her 136 games as a
Buckeye, an NCAA recordSchools all-time career scoring leader (2,818 points), while 1,422 rebounds are a Big Ten record
Holds OSUs record for most consecutive starts (136), which she obtained while leading the Buckeyes to three consecutive
Big Ten tournament championshipsFour-year career averages of 20.7 points, 10.5 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game
Led Buckeyes to four straight NCAA Tournaments, including the Sweet 16 her final two yearsAs a senior in 2010-2011, was
Named WBCA/State Farm and USBWA All-America for the third consecutive year ...Associated Press First Team All-America for
the second straight seasonIn 2009-2010, Lavender was named Big Ten Tournament Most Outstanding player for the second
year in a rowFirst-ever Buckeye to eclipse 2,000 points as a juniorIn 2007-2008, became the first Big Ten freshman
male or female to win Player of the Year honors while averaging 17.6 ppg, 9.9 rpg and shot 51% from the field.

JANTEL
LAVENDER

JANTEL LAVENDER

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Center
64
185
November 12, 1988
Ohio State
2

Personal: Born Nov. 12, 1988 in Cleveland, Ohio ... Parents are Freddie and Robin LavenderHas one brother, Freddie, and a twin
sister, Jazmine...Brother played college football and basketball.
Transactions: Selected in the first round, fifth overall, by the Sparks in the 2011 WNBA Draft.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2011-LAS 33 487 92 184 .500 0
0
--- 33 45 .733 35 68 103 3.1 15 0.5 46
6
12 217 6.6
2012-LAS 34 490 81 160 .506 0
0
--- 27 32 .844 50 84 134 3.9 18 0.5 53
9
18 189 5.6
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals:
67 977 173 344 .503 0
0
--- 60 77 .779 85 152 237 3.5 33 0.5 102
15 30 406 6.1

ADIA MATHIES

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
59
March 18, 1991
Kentucky
Rookie

BIOGRAPHY

College: Started four years at Kentucky, becoming the first Wildcat (male
or female) with 1,900 points, 600 boards, 300 assists and 300 steals
Kentuckys all-time leader with 320 steals and second in points with
2014.As a senior, was named All-American Second Team (AP) and SEC Co-Player of the Year for the second timeFinished
the season second in the SEC in scoring (16.1 ppg) and three-pointer field goal percentage (.422)With the Cats, reached the
Elite 8 in three of four years2010 SEC Freshman of the Year.

Personal: Born March 18, 1991 in Louisville, KYPrepped at Iroquios High School, leading the Lady Raiders to 33-1 record
and state championship as a senior in 2008-09.2009 Kentucky Miss Basketball and Gatorade Kentucky Girls Basketball
Player of the YearIroquois all-time leading scorer with 3,113 points.
Transactions: Selected as the 10th overall pick by the Sparks in the 2013 draft.

ADIA
MATHIES

JENNA OHEA

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Guard
61
174
June 6, 1987
Australia
2

BIOGRAPHY

2012 (Los Angeles): Played 8 gamesAveraged 4.8 points, 2.5 rebounds


and 2.0 assists...Scored a career-high 15 points vs. Minnesota on Sept. 4
Missed the first 25 games of the season to train and play for the Australia
National Team...Played all four postseason games with the SparksAveraged 2.3 points, 1.3 assists, 1.8 rebounds and 17.8
minutes.

2011 (Los Angeles): Averaged 4.8 points, 1.5 rebounds and 1.3 assists in 31 games as a rookieRanked second in the WNBA
in three-point field goal percentage at .444Four double-digit scoring efforts, including career-high 14 points on July 28 at
Atlanta, shooting 5-of-7 from long-rangeFirst career double-double was 12-point, 11-rebound effort in July 17 win at San
AntonioMade five consecutive starts beginning Aug. 18 vs. Indiana.
Club: In 2010-11, OHea averaged 12.1 points, 4.0 rebounds and 5.1 assists over 15 games in her second season with the
Bulleen Melbourne Boomers, helping the club win the first WNBL title in its 26-year historyEarned her back-to-back
selections to the WNBLs All-Star Five (2010-11 and 2009-10), which is analogous to the All-WNBA First TeamIn 2009-10,
ranked amongst the leagues top ten players in assists (3rd-4.7), free throw percentage (3rd -83.6%), defensive rebounds
(10th-4.6) Also in 2009, she played with French club ArrasIn 2004, OHea was named WNBL Betty Watson Rookie of the
Year while playing with the Australian Institute of Sport.
Personal: Born on June 6, 1987 in Traralgon, Victoria, AustraliaGrew up in MelbourneThe daughter of John and Marie
OHea has two brothers, Matthew and LukeEnjoys shopping and going to the beach, as well as rooting on the Carlton Blues
of Australian Rules Football.
TransactionsRe-signed with the Sparks on Feb. 26, 2013....Signed to a free-agent contract on March 31, 2011.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2011-LAS 31 507 49 113 .434 28
63 .444 22 28 .786 15 32 47 1.5 40 1.3 46
12 5
148 4.8
2012-LAS 8 144 13 25
.520 7
14 .500 5
7
.714 8 12 20 2.5 16 2.0 14
3
1
38 4.8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals:
39 650 62 138 .449 35
77 .455 27 35 .771 23 44 67 1.7 56 1.4 60
15 6
186 4.8

JENNA
OHEA

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE
2012 WNBA Rookie of the Year
2012 (Los Angeles): Named 2012 WNBA Rookie of the YearAward marked
the fifth straight season in which the No. 1 overall pick in the Draft won the
Rookie of the Year awardLed all rookies in points (14.0), rebounds (7.5),
blocks (0.9) and double-doubles (9 fifth in WNBA)Finished season ranked
second among all rookies in field goal percentage (53.5%) and fourth in steals
(1.4)started 33 of 33 games played for the SparksEarned Rookie of the
Month honors four of five times (May, July, August and Sept)Scored 20 or more points seven times including a careerhigh 30 points and 11 rebounds vs. the Chicago Sky on Sept. 13Finished rookie campaign with 9 double-doubles (fifth
in the league)Had the leagues 12th 20-20 game in history and tied the record for offensive rebounds in a game (12) vs.
IndianaRecorded first double-double with 25 points and 12 rebounds on June 8th against PhoenixMade her WNBA
debut with 9 points and 3 steals in the Sparks season opener against Seattle...Started all four postseason games...Set playoff
career-highs with 12 points, 8 rebounds and 33 minutes in her first playoff game and win in the Conference Semi-Finals vs.
San AntonioAveraged 9.5 points, 6.0 rebounds and 24.5 minutes vs. the Silver Stars to help lead the Sparks to the Western
Conference FinalsStarted both games vs. the Minnesota Lynx in the Western Conference Finals, averaging 8.5 points, 4.5
rebounds and 26.5 minutesthrough four postseason games, averaged 9.0 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 25.5 minutes.
College: Stanfords second all-time leading scorer (2,491 points) Fourth player in Stanfords history to tally 2,000 points
and 1,000 rebounds...Led Stanford to four Final Four appearances...Three-time Wade Trophy and Wooden Award finalist...
Named Pac-10 Player of the Year (2009-10)...Ended her career in top five of Stanfords all-time categories: free throws
attempted (718 - first), points scored (2,491 - second), field-goal percentage (58.3 - third), free throws made (555 - second),
rebounds (1,226 - third), points per game (17.2 - fourth) and rebounds per game (8.5 - fourth)...Set single-season records for
points scored (809), points per game (22.5), free throws made (191) and attempted (230)...As a senior, was named Pac-12
Player of the Year, All-Pac 12 First Team and All-Defensive Team honorable mention...named Pac-10 Player of the Year, AllPac-10 Team, Pac-10 Tournament Most Outstanding Player and Sacramento Regional, MVP and to all-Final Four Team as a
sophomore...Earned gold medal with USA Basketball World University Games Team in 2011ranked second on the team in
scoring (13.2 ppg), rebounding (5.7 rpg) and shooting percentage (65.3)
Personal: Goes by Nneka (Neck-A)Hometown is Tomball, TexasHas three younger sisters: Chiney, Chisom and Ernima
Chiney plays basketball at Stanford.
Transactions: Selected by Los Angeles in the 1st round as the #1 overall pick in the 2012 WNBA Draft...

NNEKA
OWUMIKE

NNEKA OGWUMIKE

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
62
175
July 2, 1990
Stanford
1

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2012-LAS 33 920 178 333 .535 1
7
.143 105 143 .734 98 149 247 7.5 40 1.2 87
46 29 462 14.0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals:
33 920 178 333 .535 1
7
.143 105 143 .734 98 149 247 7.5 40 1.2 87
46 29 462 14.0

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE
2012 All-WNBA First Team selection
2011 All-Star selection
2009 WNBA Peak Performer Award for rebounding
2009 All-WNBA Second Team selection
2008 WNBA MVP
2008 WNBA Rookie of the Year
2008 WNBA All-Rookie Team
2008 All-WNBA First Team selection

WNBA Career Highlights: In 2008, became the first player to earn WNBA MVP and Rookie of the Year in the same season
Second player to dunk in league history and first player to do so in consecutive games (2008).
2012 (Los Angeles): Started all 33 games playedAveraged 17.4 points, 3.3 assists and 30.7 minutes per gameLed the
team in rebounds (9.7) and blocks (2.30) per game Second on the team in scoring and steals (1.55) and tied for second in
assistsLed the league in blocks and defensive rebounds (7.2) per gameFinished third in the WNBA in rebounding and
seventh in scoringTied for first in double-doubles among league leaders (18)Named Western Conference Player of the
Month for May, June and JulyFive time WNBA Player of the WeekScored her 1500th career point against Minnesota
with 23 points (May 24, 2012)Had a career-high nine blocks and tied a season-high in points with 33 against Tulsa on June
20Set new career-highs in free throws made (12) and attempted (17) vs. Minnesota on July 5Member of USAs gold
medal Womens Basketball team at the 2012 London OlympicsStarted all four playoff gamesAveraged new postseason
career-highs with 28.8 points, 11.0 rebounds and 4.3 assists through four gamesLed the league in playoff scoring and
reboundingAveraged a double-double with 29.0 points and 13.0 rebounds in the Western Conference Finals against
MinnesotaSet playoff career-highs in points (33), field goals made (14), attempted (22) and three-point field goal attempts
(6) in the Sparks 79-80 loss to Minnesota in the Western Conference Finals.
2011 (Los Angeles): Averaged 18.5 points, 8.6 rebounds and 2.6 assists in 17 games playedScoring and rebounding
averages led Sparks and would have both ranked fourth in the WNBA had she played the minimum number of games
Suffered right knee injury June 26 at New York, sidelining her 15 contestsReturned from injury to earn fifth career WNBA
Player of the Week award on Aug. 22Season-high 32 points on Sept. 3 at Phoenix, one of 16 double-digit scoring efforts
Amassed six of her 38 career double-doublesSparks leading scorer on 10 occasions and top rebounder 11 times Selected
as the Western Conference starting center for the 2011 WNBA All-Star Game at mid-season, but missed the contest in San
Antonio due to the aforementioned knee injury......Currently playing with UMMC Ekaterinburg, her third season with the
Russian club.
2010 (Los Angeles): Played in 10 games before dislocating her left shoulder against the Minnesota LynxAt the time of

CANDACE
PARKER

CANDACE PARKER

PERSONAL FACTS
her injury, Parker was averaging a career-high
20.6 points and 10.1 boards per game
Teams leading rebounder in each of those 10
contests, and leading scorer seven times.

POSITION
HEIGHT
WEIGHT
DATE OF BIRTH
COLLEGE
YEARS PRO

Forward
64
175
April 19, 1986
Tennessee
5

2009 (Los Angeles): Missed the first month


(nine games) of the 2009 WNBA season
following the birth of her first child, Lailaa
Named second team All-WNBARanked
second on team in scoring with 13.1 points
per gameLed the league in rebounds per game (9.8) and blocks per game (2.12)Ranked second in total blocks (53)Twice
named WNBA Player of the Week Earned the 2009 WNBA Peak Performer Award for reboundingSelected to play for Team USA
in the 2010 FIBA World Championships, but missed competition due to the aforementioned shoulder injury.
2008 (Los Angeles): No. 1 pick in the WNBA DraftPosted 34 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists in her debut Became the
first player to earn WNBA MVP and Rookie of the Year in the same seasonThis goes without saying, but she was Named First Team
All-WNBA and All-Rookie TeamEarned the May and July Rookie of the Month awardsLed all rookies in scoring (18.5 ppg.),
rebounding (9.5 rpg.), blocks (2.3 bpg.) and minutes (33.6 mpg.)Led the league in double-doubles (17), rebounds per game and
total rebounds (313)Ranked second in blocks and fifth in pointsBecame the second player to dunk during the regular season
on June 22 vs. IndianaShe would go on to dunk two nights later vs. Seattle on June 24Earned a gold medal while representing
the United States at the Summer Olympics in Beijing.
College: Attended the University of Tennessee where she led the Lady Vols to consecutive NCAA Championships (2007 and 2008)
Named the National Player of the Year in both of those seasons by every major award committeeIn 2006-07, she became the
youngest woman ever to earn the State Farm Wade Trophy Player of the Year...Two-time Final Four MVPAlso named a WBCA/
Kodak All-American as a redshirt freshman in 2005-06, in addition to Second Team AP All-America statusThe fastest UT player
to reach 1,000 career points As a freshman vs. Army, became the first female to dunk in an NCAA Tournament game and the
first woman to dunk twice in any game Named the SEC Freshman of the Year, a first-team All-SEC selection in 2005-06...Capped
collegiate career with SEC Player of the Year accolades in 2007-08Earned SEC All-Academic honors. In 2004-05, Parker joined
teammate Alex Fuller as the first-ever redshirt freshmen in Lady Vol History while recovering from a pair of surgeries as a prepster
she earned a spot on the Lady Vol Honor Roll and was named to the SEC All-Academic Freshman Team.
Personal: Parker is married to Sheldon WilliamsCouple has one daughter, LailaaHas two brothers, Anthony and Marcus...
Anthony is a starting guard for the Cleveland CavaliersBorn on April 19, 1986 in St. Louis, Mo....Parents are Larry and Sara Parker.
Transactions: Selected in the first round (first overall) by the Los Angeles Sparks in the 2008 WNBA Draft.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2008-LAS 33 1,109 231 442 .523 11
23 .423 137 187 .733 84 229 313 9.5 113 3.4 91
42 75 610 18.5
2009-LAS 25 815 131 270 .485 5
24 .208 61 80 .762 60 184 244 9.8 64 2.6 53
15 53 328 13.1
2010-LAS 10 335 81 162 .500 3
12 .250 41 56 .732 19 82 101 10.1 22 2.2 18
10 22 206 20.6
2011-LAS 17 555 116 227 .511 18
43 .419 64 87 .736 21 125 146 8.6 47 2.8 34
21 27 314 18.5
2012-LAS 33 1,014 228 474 .481 19
59 .322 98 138 .710 83 237 320 9.7 110 3.3 58
51 76 573 17.4
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals
118 3,828 787 1,1575 .500 56
164 .341 401 548 .732 267 857 1,124 9.5 356 3.0 254
139 253 2,031 17.2

BIOGRAPHY
WNBA CAREER CAPSULE
2012 WNBA Most Improved Player of the Year
2012 All-WNBA Second Team selection
2012 (Los Angeles): Played all 34 games, starting 33 contestsNamed
WNBAs Most Improved Player of the YearAveraged career-high in points
(17.5 ppg), assists (4.9 agp), rebounds (3.2 rpg) and steals (1.3 spg)Led the
Sparks in both points and assists per gameEstablished career-highs in field
goal percentage (.491) and minutes (31.5 mpg)Scored at least ten points
in all but six gamesHad an 11-game streak of double-digit scoring from July
5 - Sept. 2Scored 20-plus points in every game played in AugustNamed WNBA Western Conference Player of the Month
for August. ..Ranked sixth in the WNBA in scoring, fourth in assists and second in free-throw percentage (.901)Scored a
career-high 29 points three timesNetted her 1000th career point on June 16 vs. San Antonio...Started all four postseason
gamesAveraged 20.0 points, 1.8 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 34.3 minutes through four gamesSet a new playoff careerhigh in points with 29 vs. San Antonio on Sep 27Scored 20-plus points in both games vs. San Antonio in the Western
Conference Semi-Finals seriesWent a perfect 10-10 at the line to set new career marks in free throws attempted and made
vs. San Antonio on Sept. 2.
2011 (Los Angeles): Established new career highs of 11.2 points and 2.9 assists per game, starting 17 of her 32 contests
Ranked sixth in the WNBA with a .427 three-point shooting percentage, while her 56 trifectas were seventh-most Drained
six three-pointers on Sept. 3 at Phoenix, one-shy of the franchise record Established a new career-high 28 points on July
26 against the Lynx Led L.A.s huge 79-74 comeback win at Tulsa with 25 points, 14 after halftime Double-digit scorer
17 times, who led the Sparks offensively on five occasionsTallied a career-high eight assists on July 12 at San Antonio
Playing the 2011-12 off-season with Dynamo Moscow in Russia.
2010 (Los Angeles): Traded to the Sparks from the Chicago Sky on May 13Averaged 8.6 points, 2.2 rebounds and 1.3
assists while playing in all 34 gamesTotaled 19 points against Atlanta on June 27.
2009 (Chicago): Drafted third overall by the SkyPlayed in 27 games off the bench, averaging 7.6 points, 1.4 rebounds and
1.9 assists in 14.3 minutes per gameScored a total of 205 pointsLed all WNBA rookies and was second overall in the
WNBA with a .444 percent mark from three-point rangeDished out 1.89 assists per game which ranked sixth among WNBA
rookiesScored 25 points in a 96-77 win against New York on Aug. 28Had a seven assists and 22 points in an 86-81 win at
Seattle on July 12.

KRISTI
TOLIVER

KRISTI TOLIVER

PERSONAL FACTS
POSITION

Guard

College: Capped her stand-out career at


57
HEIGHT
Maryland with First Team AP All-America
130
WEIGHT
accolades as senior in 2008-09Was a
January 27, 1987
DATE OF BIRTH
Second Team All-American as a junior
Maryland
COLLEGE
4
YEARS PRO
Earned similar accolades from the WBCA both
yearsAs a freshman in 2006, nailed a gametying three-pointer against Duke to send the
NCAA Championship game into overtime,
eventually leading Marylands first national
titleBroke the ACCs single-season assist record in 2008, a mark which had stood for 28 years25th player in school history to
1,000 points, raking 11th with 1,433 pointsShe holds the schools record for career free throw percentage at 87.0% and three
point field goals made with 209.
Personal: Daughter of Peggy Toliver and NBA referee George ToliverHas an older sister, Carli, who lettered at Lehigh in basketball
from 2001-05 Majored in the College of Letters & SciencesHobbies include playing jazz on the trumpet.
Transactions: Selected in the first round (third overall) in the 2009 WNBA Draft by the Chicago Sky. Traded to the Los Angeles Sparks
just before the start of the 2010 season.

REGULAR SEASON
Year-Team G MIN FGM FGA PCT FG3M FG3A PCT FTM FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT RPG AST APG PF DQ STL BLK PTS PPG
2009-CHI 27 386 72 159 .453 40
90 .444 21 23 .913 6 31 37 1.4 51 1.9 33
10 3
205 7.6
2010-LAS 34 703 105 240 .438 37
106 .349 44 54 .815 23 52 75 2.2 44 1.3 63
18 2
291 8.6
2011-LAS 32 754 126 298 .423 56
131 .427 49 54 .907 18 43 61 1.9 93 2.9 58
21 0
357 11.2
2012-LAS 34 1,071 197 401 .491 64
151 .424 137 152 .901 31 78 109 3.2 166 4.9 102
45 3
595 17.5
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Totals
127 2,915 500 1,098 .455 197 478 .412 251 283 .887 78 204 282 2.2 354 2.8 256
94 8
1,448 11.4

2012 FINAL STATS


Date

Opponent

Team/Opp Home Road

Total

High Scoring

High Rebounds High Assists

Opponent Scoring

Atten.

May 18
May 22
---------May 24
---------May 26
---------May 29
---------June 3
June 8
June 13
June 15
June 16
---------June 18
June 20
June 23
June 24
June 26
---------June 28
July 5
July 7
July 8
July 10
---------July 12
Aug 18
Aug 21

@Seattle
SEATTLE

W 72-66
W 74-61

0-0
1-0

1-0
1-0

1-0
2-0

Toliver-25
Parker-21

Milton-Jones-7
Parker-10

Wauters-17
Wauters-15

9,686
10,717

@Minnesota

L 84-92

1-0

1-1

2-1

Ogqumike-9

Augustus-25

7,923

@Phoenix

W 99-88

1-0

2-1

3-1

Parker-23
Toliver-23
Parker-27

Dupree-24

10,200

TULSA

W 76-75

2-0

2-1

4-1

Parker-10

Williams-19

8,312

SEATTLE
PHOENIX
@Connecticut
@Atlanta
@San Antonio

W 67-65
W 90-74
W 87-81
L 59-92
L 85-98 (OT)

3-0
4-0
4-0
4-0
4-0

2-1
2-1
3-1
3-2
3-3

5-1
6-1
7-1
7-2
7-3

Milton-Jones-16
Toliver-16
Toliver-23
Ogwumike-25
Parker-33
Ogwumike-13
Beard-23

W 101-70
W 95-79
W 93-84
L 71-91
L 75-91

5-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-1

3-3
3-3
4-3
4-3
4-4

8-3
9-3
10-3
10-4
10-5

Ogwumike-24
Parker-33
Toliver-29
Parker-15
Toliver-21

Smith-19
Houston-22
Charles-19
McCoughtry-31
Hammon-24
Young-24
Snow-15
G. Johnson-19
Bonner-24
Young-20
Williams-27

12,639
11,198
6,058
8,872
8,234

WASHINGTON
TULSA
@Phoenix
SAN ANTONIO
@Tulsa
@San Antonio
MINNESOTA
SEATTLE
ATLANTA
@Phoenix

L 80-94
W 96-90
W 83-59
W 79-63
W 90-71

6-1
7-1
8-1
9-1
9-1

4-5
4-5
4-5
4-5
5-5

10-6
11-6
12-6
13-6
14-6

Parker-25
Toliver-29
Toliver-23
Toliver-19
Parker-22

W 77-74
W 82-71
W 79-69

9-1
9-1
10-1

6-5
7-5
7-5

15-6
16-6
17-6

Ogwumike-22
Toliver-22
Toliver-21

SAN ANTONIO

W 101-77

11-1

7-5

18-6

Toliver-29

Parker-10

D. Robinson-22

8,696

NEW YORK
@Tulsa
@Chicago
@Minnesota

W 87-62
L 85-99
L 74-85
L 77-88

12-1
12-1
12-1
12-1

7-5
7-6
7-7
7-8

19-6
19-7
19-8
19-9

Toliver-26
Toliver-21
Toliver-19
Beard-17

Ogwumike-7
Milton-Jones-7
Parker-9
Lavender-8

Toliver-4
Toliver5
Beard-5
Milton-Jones-5
Toliver-6
Parker-6
Ogwumike-5
Toliver-8
Ogwumike-6
Toliver-6

Young-23
Augustus-18
Little-12
Lyttle-17
Bonner-14
Prahalis-14
Catchings-27
Wright-21
Douglas-22

15,184
11,256
12,229
11,019
9,336

@Indiana
@Seattle
INDIANA

Parker-13
Ogwumike-12
Parker-16
Ogwumike-10
Lavender-11
Parker-11
Parker-8
Parker-8
Lavender-9
Parker-15
Lavender-7
Ogwumike-7
Parker-13
Parker-13
Parker-14
Parker-12
Parker-14
Ogwumike-14
Ogwumike-20
Parker-12
Ogwumike-10

12,433
5,275
6,197
8,123

@Washington

W 96-68

12-1

8-8

20-9

Parker-9

Parker-8

@New York
CHICAGO
CONNECTICUT
PHOENIX
MINNESOTA

L 71-73
W 86-77
W 93-82
W 101-76
W 92-76

12-1
13-1
14-1
15-1
16-1

8-9
8-9
8-9
8-9
8-9

20-10
21-10
22-10
23-10
24-10

Toliver-18
Parker-18
Toliver-17
Ogwumike-30
Parker-23
Parker-26
Ogwumike-22
Parker-22

Pondexter-20
Latta-21
Prince-17
Augustus-23
Moore-23
Currie-16

Parker-15
Ogwumike-11
Parker-10
Parker-11
Ogwumike-11
Parker-11

Toliver-4
Parker-5
Toliver-6
Parker-7
Toliver-8

Pondexter-21
Cash-23
Charles-21
Bonner-23
Wright-19

7,357
8, 489
10,503
8,579
10,217

Opponent
SAN ANTONIO
@San Antonio
@Minnesota
MINNESOTA

Team/Opp
W 93-86
W 101-94
L 77-94
L 79-80

Home
1-0
1-0
1-0
1-1

Road
0-0
1-0
1-1
1-1

Total
1-0
2-0
2-1
2-2

High Scoring
Toliver-29
Parker-32
Parker-25
Parker-33

High Rebounds
Parker-9
Parker-9
Parker-11
Parker-15

High Assists
Beard-3
Parker-6
Parker-4
Beard-7

Opponent Scoring
Hammon-19
Young-28
Moore-20
Augustus-21

Atten.
5,013
5,293
8,513
10,791

Aug 23
---------Aug 25
Aug 30
Sep 2
Sep 4
---------Sep 7
---------Sep 9
Sep 13
Sep 14
Sep 18
Sep 20
---------Playoffs
Date
Sep 27
Sep 29
Oct 4
Oct 7

Parker-11

Toliver-6
Parker-4
Toliver-4
Toliver-4
Beard-4
Toliver-4
Toliver-5
Toliver-7
Toliver-9
Parker-7
Coleman-4
Toliver-5
Toliver-6
Toliver-6
Toliver-4
Beard-4
Toliver-7
Beard-10
Toliver-6
Parker-7
Beard-7
Beard-7

8, 612
8,388
9,670
11,301
4,102

7,244
9,127
8,402

7,468

2012 FINAL STATS


Record
---Overall
EASTERN
WESTERN

RECORD
24-10
9-3
15-7

HOME
16-1
6-0
10-1

ROAD
8-9
3-3
5-6

OT
0-1
0- 1

Team Winning and Losing Streaks


OVERALL
Win - 9
Loss- 3

HOME
Win - 10
Loss- 1

ROAD
Win - 3
Loss- 3

Attendance
High: 12,639

Average: 10,176

Total: 172,990 Overall

Point differentials
MARGINS
Won By:
Lost By:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 28 31 33
1 1 1
3
2 1 3
1
4
1
2 2 1 1
1
1
2
1 2
1
1
1

Record When
At Start Off :
2nd-Ahead:
-Behind:
-Tied:
3rd-Ahead:
-Behind:
-Tied:
4th-Ahead:
-Behind:
-Tied:

OVERALL
22-3
2-7
0-0
20-4
4-6
0-0
19-1
4-9
1-0

HOME
16-0
0-1
0-0
15-0
1-1
0-0
14-0
2-1
0-0

ROAD
6-3
2-6
0-0
5-4
3-5
0-0
5-1
2-8
1-0

FG%
-44%
45-49%
50-54%
55-59%
+60%

OVERALL
8-5
9-5
5-0
1-0
1-0

HOME
5-1
5-0
5-0
1-0
0-0

ROAD
3-4
4-5
5-0
0-0
1-0

2012 PLAYER STATS


PLAYER
Toliver
Parker
Ogwumike
Beard
Milton-Jones
Lavender
OHea
Coleman
Sykes
Miller
Hoffman
Anosike
Evans
Riley
Zoll

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROW-- --REBOUNDS-G GS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TO
34 33 1071 197 401 .491 64 151 .424 137 152 .901 31 78 109
33 33 1014 228 474 .481 19 59 .322 98 138 .710 83 237 320
33 33 919 178 333 .535 1 7 .143 105 143 .734 98 149 247
33 33 1017 137 314 .436 35 87 .402 66 83 .795 10 61 71
34 34 926 123 295 0417 29 89 0326 65 79 .823 48 102 150
34 1 490 81 160 .506 0 0 --- 27 32 .844 50 84 134
8 0 144 13 25 .520 7 14 .500 5 7 .714 8 12 20
34 2 548 37 116 .319 14 55 .255 18 20 .900 24 63 87
30 0 259 33 87 .379 18 48 .375 8 15 .533 8 26 34
10 1 141 11 37 .297 2 6 .333 2 2 1.000 9 18 27
20 0 208 18 52 .346 5 19 .263 8 10 .800 13 29 42
10 0 57 2 8 .250 0 0 --- 6 6 1.000 0 12 12
3 0 15 1 5 .200 0 4 .000 0 0 --- 0 0 0
2 0 15 0 5 .000 0 1 .000 0 0 --- 0 1 1
0 0 0
0 0 --- 0 0 --- 0 0 --- 0 0 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

PLAYER
Toliver
Parker
Ogwumike
Beard
Milton-Jones
Lavender
OHea
Coleman
Sykes
Miller
Hoffman
Riley
Anosike
Evans
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

6825 1059 2312 .458 194 540 .359


6825 992 2385 .416 208 645 .322

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


40 6 9 4 14 2
39 16 8 4 7 9
38 20 6 4 4 3
40 7 10 6 5 3
38 11 5 5 4 3
37 11 3 2 4 2
27 6 5 1 2 1
24 7 4 4 2 1
24 4 3 3 3 1
39 10 3 1 3 0
18 5 3 3 2 1
8 1 2 0 1 0
12 3 3 1 2 1
10 0 3 1 2 0
225 55 26 16 28 12
225 45 27 14 27 9

PTS
29
33
30
23
21
16
15
8
11
7
9
0
4
2
101
99

MIN
31.5
30.7
27.9
30.8
27.2
14.4
18.0
16.1
8.6
14.1
10.4
7.5
5.7
5.0
200.7
200.7

545 687 .793


469 641 .732

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


3.2 4.9 1.32 3.6
9.7 3.3 1.55 3.0
7.5 1.2 1.39 1.3
2.2 3.3 2.00 2.5
4.4 1.8 1.00 1.9
3.9 0.5 0.26 1.1
2.5 2.0 0.38 0.8
2.6 1.1 0.62 0.7
1.1 0.6 0.30 0.5
2.7 1.1 0.20 1.3
2.1 0.5 0.65 0.7
0.5 1.0 0.00 0.5
1.2 0.5 0.30 0.6
0.0 1.0 0.33 0.7
36.9 17.8 8.91 16.2
33.6 17.3 8.88 15.8

AST
166
110
40
109
60
18
16
36
19
11
9
5
3
2
0

PF DQ
102 2
58 1
87 1
91 1
95 1
56 0
14 0
44 0
27 0
4 0
30 0
9 0
1 0
3 0
0 0

382 872 1254 604 621 6


382 759 1141 589 606 2

BLK
0.09
2.30
0.88
0.39
0.71
0.53
0.13
0.24
0.13
0.00
0.05
0.00
0.20
0.00
5.26
3.06

PTS
17.5
17.4
14.0
11.4
10.0
5.6
4.8
3.1
3.1
2.6
2.5
0.0
1.0
0.7
84.0
78.3

STL
45
51
46
66
34
9
3
21
9
2
13
3
1
0
0

TO BLK
124 3
98 76
42 29
83 13
63 24
38 18
6 1
24 8
16 4
13 0
13 1
6 2
2 0
1 0
0 0

PTS
595
573
462
375
340
189
38
106
92
26
49
10
2
0
0

AVG
17.5
17.4
14.0
11.4
10.0
5.6
4.8
3.1
3.1
2.6
2.5
1.0
0.7
0.0
0.0

303
302

550 179 2857 84.0


536 104 2661 78.3

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
10C 18T 14C 14C 6T 9C 29C
15 25 12C 17C 16T 8T 40
11C 17C 10C 12C 20C 6C 30C
13 24 11 13 10 10C 33
13 24 11 12 14 7
38
11 20 5 6 12 3C 25
5T 8T 3 5 11 5C 15C
8 14 5 8 12 5
21
4C 10C 2C 2C 4C 3C 11C
10 21 7 9 10C 7
23
11 19 9 9 14 6
26
9
1C
42
44

20
3C
93
93

13
0
40
42

18
0
51
56

16
0
55C
51

8
3C
29
30

29
2C
105
14

2012 HIGHS
---------PLAYER

FIELD FREE
----- REBOUNDS ----BLOCKED
MINUTES GOALS THROWS OFFENSIVE DEFENSIVE TOTAL ASSISTS STEALS TURNOVERS SHOTS

KRISTI
TOLIVER
----------

40C
JUL. 8
vs Atl.

10C(2)
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

14C
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

4C(2)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

5 (4)
JUN. 13
at Conn.

6T(3)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

9C
JUN. 8
vs Pho.

CANDACE
PARKER
----------

39
JUN. 16
at S.A.

14
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

12C
JUL. 5
vs Minn

6
MAY 26
at Phoe.

13
JUN. 13
at Conn.

16T
JUN. 13
at Conn.

8T
SEP. 7
at Wash.

NNEKA
OGWUMIKE
----------

38C
JUL. 12
at Ind.

11C(2)
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

10C
SEP. 13
vs Chi

12C
JUL. 12
at Ind.

8C(4)
SEP. 13
vs Chi.

20C
JUL. 12
at Ind.

ALANA
BEARD
----------

40
JUN. 16
at S.A.

9
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

6
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

2 (2)
JUL. 7
vs Sea.

5
MAY 22
vs Sea.

DELISHA
MILTON-JONES
----------

38
MAY 29
vs Tulsa

7 (2)
SEP. 13
vs Chi.

8
MAY 29
vs Tulsa

4(2)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

JANTEL
LAVENDER
----------

37
JUN. 23
at Phoe.

6
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

4 (2)
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

JENNA
OHEA
----------

27
SEP. 4
at Minn.

5T
SEP. 4
at Minn.

MARISSA
COLEMAN
----------

24
MAY 18
at Sea.

APRIL
SYKES
----------

4C
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

POINTS

14C
MAY 29
vs Tulsa

2T
JUL. 12
at Ind.

29C(3)
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

4
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

7T
MAY 24
at Minn.

9C
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

33 (2)
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

6C
SEP. 2
at Chi.

4C(2)
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

4C(2)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

3C(3)
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

30C
SEP. 13
vs Chi.

7
MAY 22
vs Sea.

10C
JUN. 28
at S.A.

6
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

5 (3)
SEP. 2
at Chi.

3
JUL. 7
vs Sea.

23
JUN. 16
at S.A.

8
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

11
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

5 (3)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

5
MAY 18
at Sea.

4 (4)
SEP. 2
at Chi.

3
JUN. 23
at Phoe.

21
JUN. 8
vs Phoe.

4 (4)
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

9C
JUN. 16
at S.A.

11
JUN. 16
at S.A.

3C(2)
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

2C(2)
AUG. 25
vs N.Y.

4T
JUN. 23
at Phoe.

2T(4)
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

16
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

2 (2)
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

3T
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

4
SEP. 7
at Wash.

6
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

5C
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

1 (3)
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

2T
SEP. 7
at Wash.

1
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

15C
SEP. 4
at Minn.

3 (3)
SEP. 7
at Wash.

2 (8)
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

3 (2)
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

5
JUL. 5
vs Minn.

7
JUL. 5
vs Minn

4
JUN. 15
at Atl.

4T
JUN. 15
at Atl.

2 (9)
SEP. 7
at Wash.

1 (8)
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

8 (2)
SEP. 7
at Wash.

24C
JUN. 28
at S.A.

4C(2)
JUN. 28
at S.A.

2C(2)
JUN. 26
at Tulsa

2C(3)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

4C
JUN. 24
vs S.A.

4C(2)
JUN. 24
vs S.A.

3C(3)
JUN. 28
at S.A.

3C
JUN. 8
vs Phoe.

3C
JUN. 28
at S.A.

1C(4)
JUL. 5
vs Minn.

11C(3)
JUN. 28
at S.A.

COCO
MILLER
----------

39
JUN. 16
at S.A.

3 (2)
JUN. 16
at S.A.

2
JUN. 23
at Phoe.

4
JUN. 16
at S.A.

6T
JUN. 16
at S.A.

10C
JUN. 16
at S.A.

3
JUN. 15
at Atl.

1 (2)
JUN. 16
at S.A.

3 (2)
JUN. 16
at S.A.

7
JUN. 16
at S.A.

EBONY
HOFFMAN
----------

18
MAY 18
at S.A.

4
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

2(3)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

2(3)
SEP. 4
at Minn.

4
MAY 24
at Minn.

5
AUG. 25
vs N.Y.

3
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

3
MAY. 22
vs Sea

2(3)
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

1
MAY 18
at Sea.

9
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

NICKY
ANOSIKE
----------

12
SEP. 7
at Wash.

1 (2)
SEP. 4
at Minn.

2 (3)
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

3
SEP. 7
at Wash.

3
SEP. 7
at Wash.

3
SEP. 7
at Wash.

1 (3)
SEP. 7
at Wash.

2
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

1 (2)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

4
SEP. 4
at Minn.

DAWN
EVANS
----------

10C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

1C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

3C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

1C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

2C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

2C
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

ANDREA
RILEY-L.A.
----------

8
JUL. 7
vs Sea.

1
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

1
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

2
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

1
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

SPARKS
High Games
----------

225
JUN. 16
at S.A.

40
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

28
JUL. 5
vs Minn

23
JUL. 12
at Ind.

36
JUN. 13
at Conn.

55
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

26
SEP. 7
at Wash.

16
MAY 18
at Sea.

28
MAY 29
vs Tulsa

12
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

101 (3)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

SPARKS
Low Games
----------

200 (33)
SEP. 29
vs Minn.

22 (2)
JUN. 15
at Atl.

8 (2)
SEP. 9
at N.Y.

6 (3)
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

18
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

27 (2)
MAY 24
at Minn.

12 (3)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

5 (3)
JUL. 12
at Ind.

6
AUG. 25
vs N.Y.

1 (2)
AUG. 23
vs S.A.

59
JUN. 15
at Atl.

OPPONENTS
High Games
----------

225
JUN. 16
at S.A.

37 (3)
AUG. 30
at Tulsa

24
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

23
JUL. 10
at Phoe.

34
JUN. 15
at Atl.

45
JUN. 15
at Atl.

27
JUN. 24
vs S.A.

14
MAY 29
vs Tulsa

27 (2)
JUN. 18
vs Wash.

9 (2)
JUN. 15
at Atl.

99
AUG. 30
at Tulsa

OPPONENTS
Low Games
----------

200 (33)
SEP. 20
vs Minn.

22 (2)
JUL. 7
vs Sea.

7
MAY 18
at Sea.

3
AUG. 18
at Sea.

15
JUN. 20
vs Tulsa

24 (3)
SEP. 13
vs Chi.

10 (2)
SEP. 7
at Wash.

5 (4)
SEP. 18
vs Phoe.

9
JUN. 24
vs S.A.

1 (7)
SEP. 4
at Minn.

59
JUL. 7
vs Sea.

"C" indicates a new career-high, "T" a tied career-high.


Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of games in which a player or team has reached a given total (if more than one).

Established in 1997 as one of eight original teams in the


Womens National Basketball Association, the Los Angeles Sparks
tipped off the WNBAs inaugural season on June 21, 1997 versus
the New York Liberty at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood,
CA. A crowd of 14,284 watched as Sparks guard Penny Toler scored
the first basket in league history, although the Liberty prevailed
67-57. Los Angeles compiled an impressive 45-17 record in four
seasons at the Great Western Forum before following their NBA
counterparts, the Los Angeles Lakers, to STAPLES Center, located in
the heart of downtown Los Angeles.
Led by 2001 WNBA Coach of the Year Michael Cooper and
MVP Lisa Leslie, the Sparks went on to tie a league record and
franchise-best 28 wins in their debut season at STAPLES Center.
Posting a record-breaking 9-0 start to the 2001 campaign, Los
Angeles completed the regular season undefeated at home with
a WNBA-best 16-0 mark. The Sparks also topped the League in
points (76.3), defensive rebounds (.720), total rebounds (.39)
and assists (18.3) per game and captured their first-ever WNBA
championship sweeping the Eastern Conference Champion
Charlotte Sting in the Finals. After retiring in November 1999 to
serve as the Sparks General Manager, former Los Angeles point
guard Penny Toler became the fastest player-turned-manager in
any mens or womens league to assemble a championship team
(two years). Toler is also the first WNBA player in the leagues
history to go from the hardwood to the executive suite as General
Manager of Player Personnel.
In 2002, the Sparks became the second team in WNBA
history to repeat as champions going undefeated (6-0)
through the playoffs en route to a sweep of the Eastern
Conference Champion New York Liberty. Los Angeles held
an impressive 12-1 playoff record during its back-to-back
championship seasons.
The 2003 season proved to be an injury-riddled one for
Los Angeles. Resiliently, the Sparks overcame their injuries and
went on to win the Western Conference Championship for a third
consecutive year. The Sparks had a convincing Game 1 victory
over the Detroit Shock 75-63. They were then faced with the
scenario of trying to become the first team in WNBA history
to win the championship on the road. This feat nearly came to
fruition as the Sparks overcame a 19-point deficit in
Game 2 at Detroit; however, the Shock pulled out the nailbiter 62-61 to force a deciding Game 3. The championship game,
held at The Palace at Auburn Hills, proved to be a historic event
as it was played before the largest crowd in WNBA history
22,076. The Shocks victory was sealed by Deanna Nolans threepoint basket with 53 seconds remaining and perfect free-throw
shooting down the stretch.
The 2004 Sparks continued their impressive streak of Playoff
appearances by making it to postseason play for the sixth-straight
year with a 25-9 regular-season record. However, the Sacramento
Monarchs ended Los Angeles chances of repeating as Western
Conference Champion with a first-round series victory over Los

Angeles. 2004 WNBA MVP Lisa Leslie led the league in rebounds
per game and was third in scoring. Leslie and teammate Nikki
Teasley each received All-WNBA recognition.
2005 introduced Los Angeles to six-time WNBA All-Star
Chamique Holdsclaw, who led the Sparks in points, free-throws
made and consistently ranked in the top three in the league for
points, minutes, and field goals that season. Sparks veteran Lisa
Leslie continued to impress fans in Los Angeles with her 15.2
points per game and 71 total blocked shots. A 2005 All-Star,
Leslie made history as the first player to dunk in a WNBA All-Star
game. With 13 wins and 16 losses under head coach Henry
Bibby, assistant coach Joe Jellybean Bryant took over for the
final five games (4-1) allowing the team to finish squarely at
.500 (17-17). With a perfectly split record, the Sparks caught
a glimpse of the postseason but their tireless efforts were
outmatched by the Monarchs for the second straight year.
2006 proved to be a historic year for the Sparks as players
reached career milestones and as the organization changed
ownership. Lisa Leslie became the first WNBA player to reach
5,000 career points and was named the WNBAs Most Valuable
Player for the third time. Leslies illustrious career was honored
in an on-court celebration in which then-team president
Johnny Buss dedicated the court to the record-breaking center.
Milestones by the Sparks did not cease there. In a historic
presentation, Penny Tolers decade of involvement with the
Sparks as an exceptional player and as a dedicated General
Manager was recognized when her No. 11 jersey was retired
during a Sparks game, marking the first female jersey to be
retired at STAPLES Center. With Coach Bryant at the helm,
the 2006 Sparks boasted a 25-9 regular season record and
came back to beat the Seattle Storm falling behind 1-0 in the
Western Conference Semifinals. The Sparks concluded the 2006
season when they were defeated at the Honda Center by the
Sacramento Monarchs, who went on to win the WNBA title.
After a decade of commitment, the Los Angeles Lakers
and the Buss family sold the Sparks to a group of investors led
by Carla Christofferson and Katherine Goodman. Sparks season
ticket holders themselves, Christofferson and Goodman focused
on connecting fans through fun and engaging experiences at
STAPLES Center. The Sparks are now one of six WNBA teams to
be owned and operated independently of NBA teams.
The 2007 season had its share of ups-and-downs. With
Coach Cooper in place but star center and team captain Lisa
Leslie out for the season on maternity leave, other players
worked to fill the void. The team was hit by another surprise
when star forward Chamique Holdsclaw announced her abrupt
retirement from the WNBA just five games into the season. The
2007 season ended with the Sparks finishing with the worst
regular-season franchise history at 10-24, breaking a string of
eight straight Playoff appearances.
The Sparks fortunes turned around in the off-season as
they landed the No. 1 pick in the 2008 WNBA Draft, which was

SPARKS HISTORY
used to select Candace Parker fresh off leading Tennessee to
consecutive NCAA titles.
That excitement carried into the 2008 season as the
Sparks returned three-time MVP Lisa Leslie and All-Star
forward DeLisha Milton-Jones to the floor. Meanwhile, the
addition of Parker had Sparks fans hoping for their third WNBA
Championship in the fall of 2008. Los Angeles was led by the
big three as Parker paced the team in scoring (18.5ppg) and
rebounds (9.5rpg), Leslie chipped in 15.5 ppg and led the team
in blocked shots (3.1bpg) and Milton-Jones was also solid
averaging 13.9 ppg and 6.3 boards. The Sparks finished the
regular season in third place in the Western Conference and
returned to the Playoffs. Taking on the Seattle Storm in the first
round and winning the series 2-1 found LA back in the Western
Conference Finals hoping to contend for the Championship. Fate
had a different plan for the Sparks, as they were 1.3 seconds
away from returning to the WNBA Finals when the San Antonio
Silver Stars converted on a game-winning basket. The Sparks
lost game three in San Antonio and with that, the season was
over.
Although the Sparks did not win their third WNBA
Championship in 2008, they did take home three of the most
prestigious individual league awards. Lisa Leslie won the 2008
Defensive Player of the Year award and Candace Parker became
the first player in WNBA history to win both the Rookie of the
Year award and the league MVP award in the same year.
In 2009, the Sparks seemingly had its greatest team ever
assembled on paper. With the additions of Tina Thompson, Betty
Lennox, Los Angeles native Noelle Quinn and a strong draft class,
the Sparks had only one goal to bring home a championship
to the city of Los Angeles.
In early 2009, Lisa Leslie announced that it would be
her final season in the WNBA. With the games greatest player
retiring, the Sparks planned to send the face of their franchise
out with a spectacular championship celebration. The team
came up just short again, losing to the eventual champion
Phoenix Mercury in the Western Conference Finals.
An up-and-down, injury-plagued 2010 campaign still
resulted in the Sparks 11th WNBA Playoff appearance in
franchise history. Star forward Candace Parker was off to a
torrid start averaging a double-double before her season
was derailed by a separated shoulder after just 10 games.
With nagging injuries to free-agent point guard signee Ticha
Penicheiro, as well as other key players, the Sparks struggled
to a 6-16 start before rallying for a 7-6 finish to qualify for the
Western Conference Semifinals in head coach Jennifer Gilloms
first season at the helm.
One highlight of 2010 was forward Tina Thompson
becoming the WNBAs all-time scoring leader, surpassing the
previous record of 6,263 points held by Sparks legend Lisa Leslie.
Thompsons record-breaking moment came with 5:01 remaining

in the third quarter of the Sparks Aug. 8 game vs. San Antonio,
when she buried a 16-footern in front of a roaring STAPLES
Center crowd.
2011 saw the signing of Southern California native Ebony
Hoffman as well as a celebration of the WNBAs 15th season, with
the Sparks being one of three original franchises dating back to
1997. Los Angeles stormed out of the gates at 4-1, including a
thrilling 96-91 win over the New York Liberty on June 21, played
15 years to the day of their inaugural meeting at the Forum.
However, misfortune struck just five days later in Newark, N.J.,
as Candace Parker suffered a knee injury vs. the Liberty that
sidelined her for the next 15 games. She returned in late August
and regained her old form, and although the Sparks remained in
Playoff contention to the very end they came up just short.
The Sparks were well-represented on the roster of Top-15
WNBA Players of All-Time, as Lisa Leslie, Tina Thompson, Ticha
Penicheiro and Teresa Witherspoon were each presented with
that honor during halftime of the 2011 All-Star Game in San
Antonio on July 23.
Another exciting announcement was made on the STAPLES
Center floor at halftime of the Aug. 26, 2011 game vs. Tulsa, as
Sparks Chairperson Paula Madison introduced Lisa Leslie to the
crowd as the newest member of the teams ownership group. In
doing so, she became the first former WNBA player to invest in
a league team.
2012 marked a record setting season for the Sparks, and it
all started when the team won the draft lottery with the lowest
possible chance and turned their luck into great fortune. First
step, hire Carol Ross as head coach. Second step, Ross and Toler
quickly assembled a list of key veterans and free agent signings
with the additions of Alana Beard, Nicky Anosike, Marissa
Coleman, Ashley Shields and Sharnee Zoll.
The final piece to the puzzle came on Draft Day when Toler
chose Nneka Ogwumike as the #1 draft pick. With the pieces in place,
the Sparks were ready to contend for the 2012 WNBA Championship.
The Sparks finished the regular season with the leagues
third-best record (24-10) and earned the No. 2 seed in the
Western Conference Playoffs, securing Los Angeles a return
to the WNBA Playoffs after missing the 2011 postseason.
Sweeping the San Antonio Silver Stars in the first round of
the Playoffs, the Sparks were back in the Championship hunt.
Unfortunately, LAs trophy dreams were cut short by the
Minnesota Lynx and their Western Conference Finals sweep over
the Sparks.
While the team didnt win its third WNBA Championship,
the accolades didnt end there; Ross, Ogwumike and Toliver
earned prestigious League awards. Head Coach Carol Ross was
named the WNBAs Coach of the Year; Sparks #1 Draft Pick,
Nneka Ogwumike, earned the coveted honor as the WNBA
Rookie of the Year and Kristi Toliver was named the leagues
Most Improved Player.

2011 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Parker
Milton-Jones
Toliver
Thompson
Hoffman
Lavender
Penicheiro
Quinn
Lacy
OHea
Pringle

G
17
34
32
34
34
33
34
33
29
31
20

SPARKS

34 34 -

OPPONENTS

GS
16
34
17
33
16
3
23
23
0
5
0

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROW-- --REBOUNDS-MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TO
555 116 227 .511 18 43 .419 64 87 .736 21 125 146
891 154 333 .462 25 71 .352 64 77 831 55 103 158
754 126 298 .423 56 131 .427 49 54 .907 18 43 61
851 120 311 .386 43 127 .339 55 66 .833 50 106 156
752 97 222 .437 38 45 .844 44 98 142 37 77 0
487 92 184 .500 0 0 --- 33 45 .733 35 68 103
807 72 148 .486 15 36 .417 46 53 .868 7 87 94
681 64 164 .390 23 58 .397 18 22 .818 11 48 59
394 57 13 .429 4 12 .333 27 50 .540 19 45 64
507 49 113 .434 28 63 .444 22 28 .786 15 32 47
222 26 55 .473 1 1 1.000 24 27 .889 18 29 47
6900 973 2188 .455 237 598 .396
6900 1042 2332 .447 207 615 .337

PLAYER
Parker
Milton-Jones
Toliver
Thompson
Hoffman
Lavender
Penicheiro
Quinn
Lacy
OHea
Pringle

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


41 14 5 3 4 5
38 9 6 5 6 2
38 6 8 3 6 0
35 10 3 3 5 3
35 9 3 3 7 2
39 12 2 1 4 2
37 10 11 3 6 1
34 5 6 2 2 1
35 6 7 3 6 3
29 11 4 3 2 2
25 9 2 2 3 4

SPARKS
OPPONENT

225 43 26
225 46 29

PTS
32
27
28
21
24
25
23
19
14
14
12

16 25 9 98
14 22 5 101

June
June 03 vs Minnesota
June 05 @ Minnesota
June 10 vs Phoenix
June 19 vs Seattle
June 21 vs New York
June 24 @ San Antonio
June 26 @ New York
June 29 @ Connecticut

W 82-74
L 69-86
W 98-84
W 74-50
W 96-91
L 80-90
L 67-77
L 76-79

July
July 05 @ Phoenix
July 09 @ Seattle
July 12 @ San Antonio
July 15 @ Tulsa
July 17 vs Washington
July 18 vs San Antonio
July 26 @ Minnesota
July 28 @ Atlanta
July 30 @ Chicago
July 31 @ Indiana

L 82-101
L 80-99
W 84-74
W 79-74
L 85-89
L 69-79
L 72-85
L 80-89
W 88-84
L 63-98

MIN
32.6
26.2
23.6
25.0
22.1
14.8
23.7
20.6
13.6
16.4
11.1

440 554 .794


440 572 .769

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


8.6 2.8 1.24 1.9
4.6 2.0 0.94 2.4
1.9 2.9 0.66 2.1
4.6 1.1 1.15 2.0
4.2 1.1 1.06 1.5
3.1 0.5 0.18 0.8
2.8 4.8 0.82 2.1
1.8 2.0 0.64 0.7
2.2 1.7 0.97 1.2
1.5 1.3 0.39 0.8
2.4 0.3 0.25 0.6

AST
47
67
93
38
36
15
162
65
48
40
5

PF DQ
34 0
99 2
58 0
74 0
77 0
46 0
48 0
26 0
40 0
46 0
27 0

293 784 1077 617 575 2


376 808 1184 616 607 4

BLK
1.59
0.35
0.00
0.68
0.26
0.36
0.09
0.06
0.31
0.16
0.65

PTS
18.5
11.7
11.2
9.9
7.5
6.6
6.0
5.1
5.0
4.8
3.9

202.9 31.7 18.1 7.32 15.2 3.38 77.1


202.9 34.8 18.1 7.71 13.6 2.26 80.3

August
August 03 vs Connecticut
August 07 vs Minnesota
August 09 vs Tulsa
August 12 vs Phoenix
August 16 vs Atlanta
August 18 vs Indiana
August 20 @ Minnesota
August 21 @ Tulsa
August 23 @ Washington
August 26 vs Tulsa
August 28 @ Seattle
August 30 vs Seattle

L 70-79
L 78-84
W 71-66
W 93-90
L 79-84
W 75-70
L 68-87
W 73-67
W 86-82
L 75-77
L 63-65
W 68-62

September
September 03 @ Phoenix
September 06 vs San Antonio
September 09 vs Tulsa
September 10 vs Chicago

L 77-93
L 65-82
W 84-73
W 74-67

STL
21
32
21
39
36
6
28
21
28
12
5

TO
33
83
66
68
51
28
71
24
35
26
12

BLK
27
12
0
23
9
12
3
2
9
5
13

249
262

516 115
464 77

PTS
314
397
357
338
256
217
205
169
145
148
77

AVG
18.5
11.7
11.2
9.9
7.5
6.6
6.0
5.1
5.0
4.8
3.9

2623 77.1
2731 80.3

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
15 25C 11 16 16 8
40
13 24 11 12 14 7
38
9C 18C 8C 9C 6C 8C 28C
14 27 17 18 16 8
37
11 19 9 9 14 6
26
11C 20C 5C 6C 12C 2C 25C
9 17 12 15 14 16 17
9 15 6 8 8 14 24
7 11T 6 9 8 7T 15
5C 8C 3C 5C 11C 4C 14C
4T 10 10 10 9C 2T 14
42 93 40 51 52 29
44 93 42 56 51 30

105
114

2010 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Parker
Thompson
Milton-Jones
Quinn
Ferdinand-Harris
Toliver
Lennox
Penicheiro
Wisdom-Hylton
Riley
Stansbury
Mokango

G
10
33
34
34
30
34
11
32
32
29
5
21

GS
10
33
34
34
24
4
0
30
1
0
0
0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROW-- --REBOUNDS-MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TO AST PF DQ
335 81 162 .500 3 12 .250 41 56 .732 19 82 101 22 18 0
1095 198 444 .446 57 162 .352 95 109 .872 63 143 206 0 98 2
1096 193 411 .470 26 82 .317 110 127 .866 34 127 161 86 107 0
1104 137 309 .443 35 87 .402 38 49 .776 26 109 135 96 55 0
728 101 247 .409 14 48 .292 52 62 .839 19 61 80 37 64 0
703 105 240 .438 37 106 .349 44 54 .815 23 52 75 44 63 2
128 18 46 .391 13 36 .361 5 6 .833
4 15 19 17 24 0
843 48 117 .410 1 9 .111 59 72 .819 17 110 127 220 57 0
482 60 120 .500 0 2 .000 24 34 .706 46 63 109 14 50 0
224 27 89 .303 15 51 .294 31 37 .838
5 17 22 29 23 0
14 1 3 .333 0 0 --1 2 .500
0 0 0 0 1 0
72 3 17 .176 0 2 .000 3 4 .750
4 9 13 1 11 0
6825 972 2205 .441 201 597 .337 503 612 .822
6825 1025 2322 .441 217 621 .349 494 627 .788

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL PTS


40 12 5 2 6 6 33
38 13 5 3 6 3 33
40 11 7 4 8 4 24
39 8 7 5 5 1 24
35 6 4 3 5 1 21
36 5 4 2 4 1 19
25 8 6 1 3 0 16
37 9 15 5 6 1 17
38 13 2 2 3 2 16
28 4 6 4 3 1 16
5 0 0 1 2 0 2
11 4 1 1 1 2 4

MIN
33.5
33.2
32.2
32.5
24.3
20.7
11.6
26.3
15.1
7.7
2.8
3.4

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 4 26 13 24 7 98
225 45 23 13 23 7 101

200.7 30.8 18.4 7.18 14.6 3.62 77.9


200.7 35.3 17.5 8.09 14.2 2.85 81.2

L 77-78
L 67-81
L 81-88
W 81-75
L 82-101

June
Fri 04 @ Phoenix
Sat 05 vs Seattle
Tue 08 vs Phoenix
Fri 11 @ Seattle
Sun 13 vs Minnesota
Fri 18 vs Connecticut
Thu 24 @ Washington
Sun 27 @ Atlanta
Tue 29 vs New York

L 89-90
L 75-79
W 92-91
L 60-82
W 88-84
L 75-78
L 53-68
L 81-89
L 68-80

July
Thu 01 vs San Antonio
Sat 03 vs Seattle
Tue 06 vs Phoenix
Tue 13 @ Tulsa
Fri 16 @ Chicago
Sun 18 @ San Antonio
Tue 20 vs Tulsa
Thu 22 @ Indiana
Sat 24 @ Connecticut
Tue 27 @ Minnesota
Fri 30 @ New York

TO
32
77
96
47
33
50
7
72
22
24
2
5

BLK
22
24
22
11
5
2
0
2
24
1
0
10

PTS
206
548
522
347
268
291
54
156
144
100
3
9

AVG
20.6
16.6
15.4
10.2
8.9
8.6
4.9
4.9
4.5
3.4
0.6
0.4

260 788 1048 626 571 4 244 496 123 2648 77.9
357 842 1199 594 622 5 275 484 97 2761 81.2

PLAYER
Parker
Thompson
Milton-Jones
Quinn
Ferdinand-Harris
Toliver
Lennox
Penicheiro
Wisdom-Hylton
Riley
Stansbury
Mokango

May
Sat 15 @ Phoenix
Sun 16 @ Seattle
Sat 22 @ San Antonio
Fri 28 vs Washington
Sun 30 vs Atlanta

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


10.1 2.2 1.00 3.2
6.2 1.8 1.15 2.3
4.7 2.5 1.09 2.8
4.0 2.8 1.03 1.4
2.7 1.2 0.87 1.1
2.2 1.3 0.53 1.5
1.7 1.5 0.18 0.6
4.0 6.9 1.34 2.3
3.4 0.4 0.56 0.7
0.8 1.0 0.48 0.8
0.0 0.0 0.20 0.4
0.6 0.0 0.10 0.2

STL
10
38
37
35
26
18
2
43
18
14
1
2

BLK PTS
2.20 20.6
0.73 16.6
0.65 15.4
0.32 10.2
0.17 8.9
0.06 8.6
0.00 4.9
0.06 4.9
0.75 4.5
0.03 3.4
0.00 0.6
0.48 0.4

W 73-63
L 62-75
L 89-98
W 87-71
L 68-80
L 73-83
W 86-83
L 57-76
W 89-80
W 71-58
L 79-88

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
15 23 11 16 16 8 40
14C 27 17 18 16 8 37
13 24 11 12 14 7T 38
9C 15 6 8 8C 14 24C
12 20T 11 14 9 7 27
8 16C 6T 6T 5C 7 25
17 32 11 12 12 8 44
9 17 12 15 14 16 27
8C 16C 2T 4T 13C 2C 16C
4C 14C 6C 7C 4C 6C 16C
6 10 4 8 13 2 13
1C 5C 2C 2C 4C 1C 4C
42 93 40 51 52 29
44C 93 42 56 51 30

August
Wed 04 vs Chicago
Fri 06 vs Tulsa
Sun 08 vs San Antonio
Tue 10 vs Indiana
Thu 12 @ Minnesota
Sat 14 @ Tulsa
Tue 17 vs Phoenix
Fri 20 vs Minnesota
Sat 21 @ Seattle

105
114

W 82-77
W 77-70
L 83-92
L 76-82
W 78-77
W 92-87
L 84-90
W 98-91
L 75-76

2009 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Parker
Thompson
Milton-Jones
Lennox
Quinn
Ferdinand-Harris
Hayden
Harrower
Wisdom-Hylton
Bobbitt
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

G
23
25
34
33
30
34
28
25
31
29
33
34
34

GS
21
24
34
33
13
9
6
1
26
0
3
-

MIN
638
815
1182
1043
640
929
339
269
520
197
353
6925
6925

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


144 278 .518
131 270 .485
152 395 .385
129 322 .401
111 268 .414
115 244 .471
58 135 .430
39 95 .411
40 111 .360
28 61 .459
26 85 .306
973 2264 .430
903 2262 .399

PLAYER
Leslie
Parker
Thompson
Milton-Jones
Lennox
Quinn
Ferdinand-Harris
Hayden
Harrower
Wisdom-Hylton
Bobbitt

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


39 13 4 2 5 3
48 14 8 3 6 6
52 14 7 3 6 3
44 10 5 4 9 1
44 12 6 3 9 1
42 7 9 4 7 2
30 5 4 3 5 1
25 9 1 2 2 4
31 5 7 3 3 0
16 5 1 1 2 3
25 5 8 4 3 1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

275 49 28 13 27 11 91
275 42 3 13 22 8 104

June
Jun 6 DETROIT
Jun 8 @Detroit
Jun 10 @Minnesota
Jun 12 @Indiana
Jun 19 @Phoenix
Jun 21 SACRAMENTO
Jun 26 @Seattle
Jun 28 SEATTLE

W 78- 58
L 52- 81
L 76- 87
L 61- 73
L 80- 89
W 67- 47
L 67- 69
W 82- 55

July
Jul 5 PHOENIX
Jul 9 @New York
Jul 11 @Washington
Jul 14 @Connecticut
Jul 22 @Seattle
Jul 28 @Minnesota
Jul 29 @Chicago

L 89-104
W 69- 60
L 63- 75
L 71- 82
L 87- 98(3OT)
W 76- 70
L 63- 75

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


1 6 .167
5 24 .208
52 141 .369
24 82 .293
25 83 .301
24 77 .312
4 22 .182
0 0 --8 39 .205
1 11 .000
8 37 .216
152 512 .297
213 636 .335

PTS MIN
28
27.7
24
32.6
30
34.8
19
31.6
25
21.3
23
27.3
15
12.1
12
0.8
12
16.8
8
6.8
10 10.7

--FREE THROWS-FT FTA PCT


65 90 .722
61 80 .763
85 98 .867
56 74 .757
59 66 .894
30 37 .811
31 37 .838
16 25 .640
9 11 .818
12 19 .632
11 13 .846
435 550 .791
479 623 .769

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


6.6 2.1 0.70 2.6
9.8 2.6 0.60 2.2
5.9 2.3 0.76 2.8
4.8 2.2 1.24 2.2
4.5 1.8 0.87 2.3
3.6 3.5 1.18 1.5
1.5 0.9 0.54 0.8
2.7 0.2 0.16 0.8
1.8 2.2 0.52 0.9
1.4 0.3 0.10 0.5
1.0 1.4 0.45 0.8

--REBOUNDS-OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ


56 95 151 49 75 1
60 184 244 64 53 1
46 153 199 78 71 0
51 106 157 71 84 1
33 103 136 54 70 0
33 89 122 118 59 0
17 24 41 24 44 1
27 40 67 6 49 0
17 40 57 69 32 0
14 27 41 8 12 0
11 22 33 4 34 0
365 883 1248 587 583 4
320 730 1050 516 622 6
BLK PTS
1.43 15.4
2.12 13.1
0.71 13.0
0.24 10.2
0.13 10.2
0.32 8.4
0.07 5.4
0.88 3.8
0.00 3.1
0.28 2.4
0.03 2.2

203.7 36.7 17.3 6.38 16.7 4.88 74.5


203.7 30.9 15.2 8.82 13.6 3.38 73.5

August
Aug 1 @Sacramento
Aug 4 SAN ANTONIO
Aug 6 SEATTLE
Aug 10 INDIANA
Aug 11 NEW YORK
Aug 14 SACRAMENTO
Aug 15 @Sacramento
Aug 18 WASHINGTON
Aug 19 MINNESOTA
Aug 21 @San Antonio
Aug 23 @Atlanta
Aug 25 CHICAGO
Aug 27 PHOENIX
Aug 30 CONNECTICUT

W 59- 56
L 59- 63
W 79- 75(OT)
W 75- 63
L 61- 65
L 79- 85
W 78- 61
W 72- 69
W 78- 63
W 67- 66(OT)
W 91- 87
W 75- 63
L 90- 98
W 91- 81

STL
16
15
26
41
26
40
15
4
16
3
15
217
300

TO
59
55
94
74
70
51
22
19
27
15
28
568
463

BLK
33
53
24
8
4
11
2
22
0
8
1
166
115

PTS
354
328
441
338
306
284
151
94
97
69
71
2533
2498

AVG
15.4
13.1
13.0
10.2
10.2
8.4
5.4
3.8
3.1
2.4
2.2
74.5
73.5

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
16 24 15 19 21 9 41
15 23 11 16 16 8T 40
13 27 17 18 16 8 37
13 24 11 12 14 7 38
17 32 11 12 12T 8 44
8C 15C 6T 8 7T 14 23C
12 20 11 14 9 7 27
8 18 5 8 11 3 18
5T 11 12 12 7 9 20
4C 8C 2C 4C 5C 1C 8C
4T 12 4 6 6 10 11
42 93 40 51 52 29
39 93 42 56 51 30C
September
Sep 1 ATLANTA
Sep 5 @San Antonio
Sep 8 SAN ANTONIO
Sep 11 MINNESOTA
Sep 13 @Phoenix

105
114

L 79- 84
L 72- 89
W 76- 68
W 90- 61
W 81- 78

2008 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Parker
Leslie
Milton-Jones
Ferdinand-Harris
Spencer
Brown
Masciadri
Johnson
Bobbitt
Dydek
Jacobs (TOT)
Jacobs (LA)
Page
Thomas
Moore
Gissendanner

G
33
33
31
33
33
32
29
23
26
2
11
5
27
20
28
2

GS
33
33
31
25
2
17
1
8
17
0
3
0
1
0
2
0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

MIN
1109
1059
1016
680
451
530
412
393
552
14
143
61
243
159
309
14

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


231 442 .523
188 406 .463
165 34 .480
91 246 .370
63 155 .406
52 146 .356
47 135 .348
35 101 .347
35 127 .276
2 5 .400
6 23 .261
3 11 .273
16 49 .327
12 34 .353
14 43 .326
0 4 .000

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


11 26 .423
4 17 .235
29 81 .358
12 44 .273
31 81 .383
23 67 .343
16 68 .235
0 10 .000
20 71 .282
0 0 --5 15 .333
2 5 .400
2 8 .250
1 6 .167
0 0 --0 1 .000

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO
137 187 .733
84 229 313 113 91 2 42 93
117 177 .661
84 209 293 80 117 2 49 119
72 93 .774 64 132 196 73 109 0 34 99
82 92 .891 30 55 85 43 71 0 25 41
17 18 .944 28 34 62 18 48 0 14 23
31 34 .912
8 51 59 66 41 0 19 39
16 20 .800
15 25 40 16 35 0 8 16
26 36 .722
12 31 43 71 38 0 24 37
16 22 .727
16 48 64 90 40 0 25 63
0 0 --2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0
3 4 .750
2 7 9 17 14 0 3 16
2 21 .000
1 1 2 6 7 0 0 8
8 12 .667 13 22 35 14 33 0 5 11
4 8 .500
10 30 40 6 3 0 2 8
11 16 .688
17 28 45 17 48 0 4 17
0 0 --2 0 2 0 2 0 0 1

7000 954 2248 .424 151 485 .3 539 717 .752


7000 888 2310 .384 185 547 .338 562 751 .748

PLAYER
Parker
Leslie
Milton-Jones
Ferdinand-Harris
Spencer
Brown
Masciadri
Johnson
Bobbitt
Dydek
Jacobs (TOT)
Jacobs (LA)
Page
Thomas
Moore
Gissendanner

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


46 16 8 5 7 6
45 15 8 5 9 8
42 10 6 4 7 2
38 5 4 3 4 1
28 7 3 2 2 1
38 9 11 4 6 0
29 4 3 2 2 1
31 6 7 4 4 1
44 6 10 3 6 1
12 3 0 0 0 0
26 4 4 1 3 0
19 1 2 0 3 0
22 4 3 2 2 1
20 6 2 1 2 3
34 9 3 1 2 1
11 1 0 0 1 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

250 47 26 13 27 15 99
250 48 21 14 26 15 99

May
May 17 @Phoenix
May 25 @Atlanta
May 29 @Indiana
May 31 @Washington

W 99- 94
W 74- 56
L 78- 82(2OT)
W 70- 59

June
Jun 3 @Chicago
Jun 6 PHOENIX
Jun 11 DETROIT
Jun 13 CONNECTICUT
Jun 14 @Sacramento
Jun 18 CHICAGO
Jun 20 @San Antonio
Jun 22 INDIANA
Jun 24 SEATTLE
Jun 26 WASHINGTON

W 81- 77(OT)
L 79- 85
W 80- 73
W 98- 93(OT)
W 74- 66
W 80- 67
L 75- 77
W 77- 63
W 76- 62
L 74- 77(OT)

PTS
40
26
38
19
14
13
15
11
11
4
5
5
10
4
7
0

MIN
33.6
32.1
32.8
20.6
13.7
16.6
14.2
17.1
21.2
7.0
13.0
12.2
9.0
8.0
11.0
7.0

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


9.5 3.4 1.27 2.8
8.9 2.4 1.48 3.6
6.3 2.4 1.10 3.2
2.6 1.3 0.76 1.2
1.9 0.5 0.42 0.7
1.8 2.1 0.59 1.2
1.4 0.6 0.28 0.6
1.9 3.1 1.04 1.6
2.5 3.5 0.96 2.4
1.5 0.0 0.00 0.0
0.8 1.5 0.27 1.5
0.4 1.2 0.00 1.6
1.3 0.5 0.19 0.4
2.0 0.3 0.10 0.4
1.6 0.6 0.14 0.6
1.0 0.0 0.00 0.5

PTS
610
497
431
276
174
158
126
96
106
4
20
10
42
29
39
0

AVG
18.5
15.1
13.9
8.4
5.3
4.9
4.3
4.2
4.1
2.0
1.8
2.0
1.6
1.5
1.4
0.0

386 896 1282 613 713 4 251 608 216 2598 76.4
359 768 1127 513 717 7 303 523 141 2523 74.2
BLK PTS
2.27 18.5
2.94 15.1
0.58 13.9
0.12 8.4
0.12 5.3
0.00 4.9
0.03 4.3
0.09 4.2
0.04 4.1
0.00 2.0
0.00 1.8
0.00 2.0
0.04 1.6
0.40 1.5
0.18 1.4
0.00 0.0

205.9 37.7 18.0 7.38 17.9 6.35 76.4


205.9 33.1 15.1 8.91 15.4 4.15 74.2

July
Jul 1 NEW YORK
Jul 3 MINNESOTA
Jul 6 PHOENIX
Jul 9 HOUSTON
Jul 10 @Sacramento
Jul 12 @Seattle
Jul 14 SAN ANTONIO
Jul 17 @Phoenix
Jul 19 @Houston
Jul 22 @Detroit
Jul 24 @Connecticut
Jul 25 @New York
Jul 27 @Minnesota

BLK
75
97
18
4
4
0
1
2
1
0
0
0
1
8
5
0

L 78- 89
L 70- 88
W 91- 80
W 82- 74(OT)
L 69- 87
L 52- 70
W 75- 62
L 92- 99
L 72- 75(OT)
W 84- 81
L 61- 87
L 68- 69
W 92- 84(OT)

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.3 4.1 3.3 1.51 3.4 2.71 22.0
11.1 3.0 4.4 1.85 4.5 3.66 18.8
7.7 2.9 4.3 1.34 3.9 0.71 17.0
5.0 2.5 4.2 1.47 2.4 0.24 16.2
5.5 1.6 4.3 1.24 2.0 0.35 15.4
4.5 5.0 3.1 1.43 2.9 0.00 11.9
3.9 1.6 3.4 0.78 1.6 0.10 12.2
4.4 7.2 3.9 2.44 3.8 0.20 9.8
4.6 6.5 2.9 1.81 4.6 0.07 7.7
8.6 0.0 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 11.4
2.5 4.8 3.9 0.84 4.5 0.00 5.6
1.3 3.9 4.6 0.00 5.2 0.00 6.6
5.8 2.3 5.4 0.82 1.8 0.16 6.9
10.1 1.5 8.3 0.50 2.0 2.01 7.3
5.8 2.2 6.2 0.52 2.2 0.65 5.0
5.7 0.0 5.7 0.00 2.9 0.00 0.0
36.6 17.5 20.4 7.17 17.4 6.17 74.2
32.2 14.7 20.5 8.66 14.9 4.03 72.1
August
Aug 28 SACRAMENTO
Aug 30 SAN ANTONIO
Sep 1 MINNESOTA
Sep 5 @San Antonio
Sep 6 @Houston
Sep 11 ATLANTA
Sep 14 SEATTLE

W 78- 63
W 58- 53
W 82- 58
L 58- 76
W 84- 66
L 72- 83
W 65- 48

2007 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Holdsclaw
McWilliams-Frank
Spencer
Fernandez
C. Thomas
Mabika
Baker (LA)
L. Thomas
Johnson
Page
Brown (LA)
Moore
Willis
Fluker (LA)
Tillis

G
5
29
34
34
34
33
24
27
11
34
27
29
8
12
3

GS
5
27
22
20
19
23
11
7
11
8
0
17
0
0
0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

MIN
150
851
828
891
640
762
492
487
206
627
327
440
77
114
8

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


31 63 .492
125 255 .490
118 300 .393
107 282 .379
114 237 .481
94 258 .364
63 192 .328
77 174 .443
29 88 .330
71 170 .418
39 99 .394
48 121 .397
7 20 .350
17 44 .386
0 2 .000

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO
15 18 .833
9 19 28 15 14 0 6 26
68 88 .773 69 101 170 49 75 1 34 50
37 42 .881 48 90 138 42 86 0 27 35
71 89 .798
12 60 72 101 31 0 36 90
53 70 .757
66 113 179 18 119 2 22 46
43 57 .754
16 110 126 72 90 1 28 73
70 84 .833
17 52 69 77 58 1 36 65
38 46 .826 27 34 61 32 63 0 9 29
11 16 .688
4 25 29 30 17 0 8 31
19 24 .792
33 78 111 45 68 0 14 25
35 40 .875
8 31 39 48 21 0 12 25
27 42 .643 36 52 88 18 64 1 6 33
2 4 .500
2 7 9 4 10 0 4 10
4 7 .571
9 10 19 3 13 0 3 9
0 0 --0 1 1 0 3 0 0 4

6900 940 2305 .408 160 456 .351 493 627 .786
6900 954 2212 .431 191 537 .356 609 800 .761

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -PLAYER


MIN REB AST ST TO BL
Holdsclaw
36 8 4 2 7 1
McWilliams-Frank 44 13 6 3 6 5
Spencer
37 12 5 3 3 2
Fernandez
47 7 7 3 7 3
C. Thomas
34 13 3 3 4 2
Mabika
37 9 7 4 7 1
Baker (LA)
34 7 8 5 6 1
L. Thomas
32 7 3 2 4 3
Johnson
27 7 7 2 6 1
Page
34 11 4 2 3 2
Brown (LA)
26 6 7 2 4 1
Moore
27 8 3 1 4 2
Willis
19 3 2 1 3 1
Fluker (LA)
23 4 1 1 3 2
Tillis
4 1 0 0 2 0
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


2 3 .667
3 13 .231
54 123 .439
12 49 .245
6 17 .353
36 116 .310
7 33 .212
16 38 .421
1 3 .333
2 10 .200
18 40 .450
0 0 --2 9 .222
1 2 .500
0 0 ---

PTS
23
21
25
26
25
21
16
23
13
13
18
13
7
11
0

250 52 24 12 26 8 96
250 50 25 15 24 10 110

May
May 22 @Chicago
May 24 @Indiana
May 26 @Connecticut

W 81- 64
L 70- 83
W 88- 68

June
Jun 2 @Sacramento
Jun 8 MINNESOTA
Jun 13 HOUSTON
Jun 15 @Washington
Jun 16 @Minnesota
Jun 18 DETROIT
Jun 20 @Houston
Jun 22 SACRAMENTO
Jun 24 SEATTLE
Jun 27 SACRAMENTO
Jun 29 NEW YORK

L 85- 88
W 90- 87
W 74- 71
W 89- 80
L 58- 83
L 73- 79
L 64- 74
W 96- 88(2OT)
L 71- 83
W 74- 66
L 68- 80

MIN
30.0
29.3
24.4
26.2
18.8
23.1
20.5
18.0
18.7
18.4
12.1
15.2
9.6
9.5
2.7

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


5.6 3.0 1.20 5.2
5.9 1.7 1.17 1.7
4.1 1.2 0.79 1.0
2.1 3.0 1.06 2.6
5.3 0.5 0.65 1.4
3.8 2.2 0.85 2.2
2.9 3.2 1.50 2.7
2.3 1.2 0.33 1.1
2.6 2.7 0.73 2.8
3.3 1.3 0.41 0.7
1.4 1.8 0.44 0.9
3.0 0.6 0.21 1.1
1.1 0.5 0.50 1.3
1.6 0.3 0.25 0.8
0.3 0.0 0.00 1.3

PTS AVG
79 15.8
321 11.1
327 9.6
297 8.7
287 8.4
267 8.1
203 8.5
208 7.7
70 6.4
163 4.8
131 4.9
123 4.2
18 2.3
39 3.3
0 0.0

356 783 1139 554 732 6 245 571 107 2533 74.5
343 836 1179 616 605 2 290 550 137 2708 79.6
BLK PTS
0.60 15.8
1.03 11.1
0.32 9.6
0.41 8.7
0.26 8.4
0.12 8.1
0.08 8.5
0.26 7.7
0.09 6.4
0.26 4.8
0.11 4.9
0.21 4.2
0.13 2.3
0.58 3.3
0.00 0.0

202.9 33.5 16.3 7.21 16.8 3.15 74.5


202.9 34.7 18.1 8.53 16.2 4.03 79.6
July
Jul 1 CHICAGO
Jul 3 @Seattle
Jul 5 INDIANA
Jul 7 CONNECTICUT
Jul 10 SEATTLE
Jul 17 SAN ANTONIO
Jul 20 @Phoenix
Jul 24 @Sacramento
Jul 27 @Minnesota
Jul 29 @Detroit
Jul 31 @New York

BLK
3
30
11
14
9
4
2
7
1
9
3
6
1
7
0

L 71- 74(OT)
L 71- 90
L 56- 57
L 89-110
L 47- 82
L 61- 63
W 87- 77
L 59- 67
L 76- 85
L 73- 75
W 73- 63

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
7.5 4.0 3.7 1.60 6.9 0.80 21.1
8.0 2.3 3.5 1.60 2.4 1.41 15.1
6.7 2.0 4.2 1.30 1.7 0.53 15.8
3.2 4.5 1.4 1.62 4.0 0.63 13.3
11.2 1.1 7.4 1.38 2.9 0.56 17.9
6.6 3.8 4.7 1.47 3.8 0.21 14.0
5.6 6.3 4.7 2.93 5.3 0.16 16.5
5.0 2.6 5.2 0.74 2.4 0.57 17.1
5.6 5.8 3.3 1.55 6.0 0.19 13.6
7.1 2.9 4.3 0.89 1.6 0.57 10.4
4.8 5.9 2.6 1.47 3.1 0.37 16.0
8.0 1.6 5.8 0.55 3.0 0.55 11.2
4.7 2.1 5.2 2.08 5.2 0.52 9.4
6.7 1.1 4.6 1.05 3.2 2.46 13.7
5.0 0.0 15.0 0.00 20.0 0.00 0.0
33.0 16.1 21.2 7.10 16.6 3.10 73.4
34.2 17.9 17.5 8.41 15.9 3.97 78.5
August
Aug 3 @Houston
Aug 4 @San Antonio
Aug 7 PHOENIX
Aug 9 WASHINGTON
Aug 11 @Phoenix
Aug 12 MINNESOTA
Aug 14 SAN ANTONIO
Aug 17 @Seattle
Aug 19 HOUSTON

L 56- 66
L 67- 86
L 93- 96
L 75- 80
L 83-100
W 89- 80
L 77- 84(OT)
L 77- 97
L 72- 82

2006 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Holdsclaw
Mabika
Johnson
Thomas
T. Moore
Page
Willis
J. Moore
Lewis
Davis
Udoka
Stansbury
Ndongue
Vilipic

G
34
25
32
32
27
34
34
24
34
34
14
1
4
16
2

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

--FIELD GOALS-- --3-POINT FG-GS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT


34 1048 257 503 .511 8 20 .400
0 737 148 315 .470 3 15 .200
32 677 92 244 .377 32 96 .333
30 810 102 254 .402 3 26 .115
1 541 65 133 .489 4 20 .200
33 637 68 145 .469 17 49 .347
4 689 66 140 .471 0 3 .000
0 319 35 91 .385 19 52 .365
33 655 59 136 .434 0 2 .000
3 456 46 144 .319 18 61 .295
0 116 14 53 .264 7 33 .212
0
7 0 1 .000 0 0 --0 22 3 8 .375 0 0 --0 100 7 26 .269 0 0 --0
11 0 2 .000 0 0 ---

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL
158 243 .650 83 240 323 108 115 4 51
76 86 .884
57 95 152 56 58 0 34
56 63 .889
17 47 64 48 77 0 19
48 60 .800 15 82 97 161 57 0 47
30 47 .638 43 100 143 26 80 1 20
53 66 .803 16 55 71 65 59 0 33
35 46 .761 40 81 121 33 63 1 17
22 31 .710 13 30 43 10 25 0 26
29 38 .763 35 63 98 24 79 1 22
21 23 .913
9 33 42 66 26 0 14
6 10 .600
1 12 13 8 11 0 5
2 2 1 .000
3 0 3 1 0 0 0
0 0 --6 1 7 2 4 0 1
4 11 .364 12 11 23 2 23 0 7
0 0 --0 2 2 0 2 0 0

6825 962 2195 .438 111 377 .294 540 726 .744
6825 873 2184 .400 196 570 .344 534 721 .741

PLAYER
Leslie
Holdsclaw
Mabika
Johnson
Thomas
T. Moore
Page
Willis
J. Moore
Lewis
Davis
Udoka
Stansbury
Ndongue
Vilipic

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


40 16 8 5 9 4
36 12 5 4 5 3
39 5 6 3 4 1
37 8 11 4 5 1
39 12 3 3 4 2
35 7 5 3 6 2
39 12 3 2 5 2
33 6 2 4 2 0
37 9 3 4 2 2
31 6 9 2 5 1
22 4 3 1 2 1
7 3 1 0 0 0
17 4 1 1 2 2
19 5 1 2 1 3
6 1 0 0 1 1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 49 27 16 24 7 105
225 45 29 15 23 8 114

May
May 21 @Seattle
May 23 @Charlotte
May 25 @San Antonio
May 30 @Chicago
May 31 @Minnesota

L 67- 90
W 72- 65
W 80- 71
W 64- 55
L 71-114

June
Jun 3 @New York
Jun 7 DETROIT
Jun 9 CHICAGO
Jun 13 PHOENIX
Jun 17 CONNECTICUT
Jun 18 SACRAMENTO
Jun 21 HOUSTON
Jun 23 @Sacramento
Jun 25 SAN ANTONIO
Jun 28 SEATTLE
Jun 30 PHOENIX

L 79- 89(OT)
W 86- 78
W 73- 65
W 98- 84
W 82- 70
W 80- 69
W 75- 55
W 77- 63
W105- 80
L 67- 75
W 85- 83

PTS
41
23
27
19
18
18
16
13
12
14
7
2
6
5
0

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -MIN REB AST STL TO


30.8 9.5 3.2 1.50 3.7
29.5 6.1 2.2 1.36 2.3
21.2 2.0 1.5 0.59 1.2
25.3 3.0 5.0 1.47 2.2
20.0 5.3 1.0 0.74 1.6
18.7 2.1 1.9 0.97 1.1
20.3 3.6 1.0 0.50 0.9
13.3 1.8 0.4 1.08 0.7
19.3 2.9 0.7 0.65 0.8
13.4 1.2 1.9 0.41 1.3
8.3 0.9 0.6 0.36 0.4
7.0 3.0 1.0 0.00 0.0
5.5 1.8 0.5 0.25 0.5
6.3 1.4 0.1 0.44 0.4
5.5 1.0 0.0 0.00 0.5

350 852 1202 610 679 7 296 534 129 2575 75.7
336 746 1082 565 636 6 284 556 128 2476 72.8

BLK PTS
1.68 20.0
0.36 15.0
0.19 8.5
0.03 8.0
0.52 6.1
0.24 6.1
0.26 4.9
0.00 4.6
0.26 4.3
0.12 3.9
0.07 2.9
0.00 2.0
0.50 1.5
0.50 1.1
0.50 0.0

200.7 35.4 17.9 8.71 15.7 3.79 75.7


200.7 31.8 16.6 8.35 16.4 3.76 72.8
July
Jul 1 WASHINGTON
Jul 3 SAN ANTONIO
Jul 5 HOUSTON
Jul 7 INDIANA
Jul 8 CHARLOTTE
Jul 14 @Phoenix
Jul 16 @Minnesota
Jul 18 NEW YORK
Jul 21 @Detroit
Jul 22 @Indiana
Jul 25 @Houston
Jul 26 @San Antonio
Jul 30 @Seattle

TO BLK PTS AVG


126 57 680 20.0
57 9 375 15.0
37 6 272 8.5
70 1 255 8.0
42 14 164 6.1
38 8 206 6.1
30 9 167 4.9
17 0 111 4.6
28 9 147 4.3
43 4 131 3.9
5 1 41 2.9
0 0 2 2.0
2 2
6 1.5
6 8 18 1.1
1 1
0 0.0

W 80- 75
L 63- 85
W 74- 62
W 72- 60
W 66- 64
W 95- 85
W 90- 78
W 70- 62
L 59- 73
W 73- 68
W 56- 52
W 81- 67
W 71- 70

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
12.3 4.1 4.4 1.95 4.8 2.18 26.0
8.2 3.0 3.1 1.85 3.1 0.49 20.4
3.8 2.8 4.5 1.12 2.2 0.35 16.1
4.8 8.0 2.8 2.32 3.5 0.05 12.6
10.6 1.9 5.9 1.48 3.1 1.04 12.1
4.5 4.1 3.7 2.07 2.4 0.50 12.9
7.0 1.9 3.7 0.99 1.7 0.52 9.7
5.4 1.3 3.1 3.26 2.1 0.00 13.9
6.0 1.5 4.8 1.34 1.7 0.55 9.0
3.7 5.8 2.3 1.23 3.8 0.35 11.5
4.5 2.8 3.8 1.72 1.7 0.34 14.1
17.1 5.7 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 11.4
12.7 3.6 7.3 1.82 3.6 3.64 10.9
9.2 0.8 9.2 2.80 2.4 3.20 7.2
7.3 0.0 7.3 0.00 3.6 3.64 0.0
35.2 17.9 19.9 8.67 15.6 3.78 75.5
31.7 16.6 18.6 8.32 16.3 3.75 72.6
August
Aug 1 @Washington
Aug 3 @Connecticut
Aug 5 @Phoenix
Aug 9 SACRAMENTO
Aug 13 MINNESOTA

L 74- 84
L 63- 72
L 80- 96
W 69- 58
W 78- 59

2005 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Holdsclaw
Leslie
Whitmore
Teasley
Mabika
Lewis
Dixon
Macchi
Thomas
Masciadri
Curry
Nieuwveen
Moore (LA)
Grubin

G
33
34
34
19
17
32
30
13
32
33
13
7
15
9

GS
33
34
34
19
14
11
23
1
0
1
0
0
0
0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

MIN
1183
1096
917
551
367
669
607
148
520
463
113
16
109
41

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


216 450 .480
204 464 .440
115 265 .434
45 135 .333
39 122 .320
65 157 .414
63 154 .409
21 53 .396
48 96 .500
44 104 .423
7 23 .304
2 3 .667
4 8 .500
0 8 .000

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


3 13 .231
7 34 .206
5 19 .263
29 94 .309
11 49 .224
31 69 .449
0 5 .000
9 28 .321
4 12 .333
19 46 .413
6 16 .375
0 0 --0 0 --0 2 .000

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO BLK
126 160 .788
86 137 223 104 94 2 38 99 16
102 174 .586 70 178 248 87 122 2 67 100 71
92 106 .868 54 89 143 42 110 1 33 57 14
22 26 .846
6 47 53 70 38 0 23 47 4
10 20 .500
8 19 27 29 43 0 15 14 0
17 25 .680
8 39 47 77 35 0 18 48 7
34 40 .850 24 43 67 77 73 0 24 40 2
12 17 .706
6 12 18 7 23 0 8 13 1
22 32 .688 28 76 104 17 102 1 11 25 19
15 20 .750 20 27 47 23 51 0 15 21 1
3 6 .500
4 7 11 12 16 0 7 10 1
0 0 --2 0 2 0 5 0 0 2 0
0 0 --4 4 8 1 21 0 4 5 0
1 4 .250
1 5 6 5 4 0 1 2 0

6800 873 2042 .428 124 387 .320 456 630 .724
6800 818 1955 .418 182 519 .351 527 709 .743

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -REB AST ST TO BL


14 7 4 6 4
14 9 5 7 7
9 5 3 5 2
7 9 3 5 1
7 7 4 3 0
4 8 3 5 1
7 8 3 3 1
3 2 4 4 1
8 3 2 3 2
4 3 3 3 1
3 3 2 3 1
2 0 0 1 0
3 1 2 2 0
2 1 1 1 0

PLAYER
Holdsclaw
Leslie
Whitmore
Teasley
Mabika
Lewis
Dixon
Macchi
Thomas
Masciadri
Curry
Nieuwveen
Moore (LA)
Grubin

MIN
40
40
39
40
38
38
37
18
29
32
14
7
18
9

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

200 45 26 15 21 10 86
200 42 23 16 24 9 90

May
May 21 @Seattle
May 25 @Minnesota
May 26 @Washington
May 28 @Charlotte
May 31 SAN ANTONIO

W 68- 50
L 65- 68
W 84- 75
L 75- 84
W 81- 70

June
Jun 4 @Sacramento
Jun 8 PHOENIX
Jun 11 SACRAMENTO
Jun 15 HOUSTON
Jun 18 MINNESOTA
Jun 20 CONNECTICUT
Jun 24 SEATTLE
Jun 26 @Detroit
Jun 28 @Indiana

L 53- 81
L 63- 66
W 81- 74
W 83- 64
W 69- 56
L 70- 90
W 76- 65
L 73- 79
W 61- 58

PTS
27
26
21
17
17
17
12
12
11
10
6
2
2
1

MIN
35.8
32.2
27.0
29.0
21.6
20.9
20.2
11.4
16.3
14.0
8.7
2.3
7.3
4.6

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


6.8 3.2 1.15 3.0
7.3 2.6 1.97 2.9
4.2 1.2 0.97 1.7
2.8 3.7 1.21 2.5
1.6 1.7 0.88 0.8
1.5 2.4 0.56 1.5
2.2 2.6 0.80 1.3
1.4 0.5 0.62 1.0
3.3 0.5 0.34 0.8
1.4 0.7 0.45 0.6
0.8 0.9 0.54 0.8
0.3 0.0 0.00 0.3
0.5 0.1 0.27 0.3
0.7 0.6 0.11 0.2

AVG
17.0
15.2
9.6
7.4
5.8
5.6
5.3
4.8
3.8
3.7
1.8
0.6
0.5
0.1

321 683 1004 551 737 6 264 492 136 2326 68.4
332 709 1041 567 654 6 247 544 115 2345 69.0

BLK PTS
0.48 17.0
2.09 15.2
0.41 9.6
0.21 7.4
0.00 5.8
0.22 5.6
0.07 5.3
0.08 4.8
0.59 3.8
0.03 3.7
0.08 1.8
0.00 0.6
0.00 0.5
0.00 0.1

200.0 29.5 16.2 7.76 14.5 4.00 68.4


200.0 30.6 16.7 7.26 16.0 3.38 69.0

July
Jul 2 PHOENIX
Jul 5 NEW YORK
Jul 12 CHARLOTTE
Jul 16 SEATTLE
Jul 19 WASHINGTON
Jul 23 @Houston
Jul 26 @Phoenix
Jul 29 @Sacramento
Jul 31 @Seattle

PTS
561
517
327
141
99
178
160
63
122
122
23
4
8
1

W 86- 63
L 55- 67
W 71- 59
L 70- 78
L 68- 74
W 69- 59
L 60- 77
L 59- 79
L 72- 77

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
7.5 3.5 3.2 1.28 3.3 0.54 19.0
9.1 3.2 4.5 2.45 3.6 2.59 18.9
6.2 1.8 4.8 1.44 2.5 0.61 14.3
3.8 5.1 2.8 1.67 3.4 0.29 10.2
2.9 3.2 4.7 1.63 1.5 0.00 10.8
2.8 4.6 2.1 1.08 2.9 0.42 10.6
4.4 5.1 4.8 1.58 2.6 0.13 10.5
4.9 1.9 6.2 2.16 3.5 0.27 17.0
8.0 1.3 7.8 0.85 1.9 1.46 9.4
4.1 2.0 4.4 1.30 1.8 0.09 10.5
3.9 4.2 5.7 2.48 3.5 0.35 8.1
5.0 0.0 12.5 0.00 5.0 0.00 10.0
2.9 0.4 7.7 1.47 1.8 0.00 2.9
5.9 4.9 3.9 0.98 2.0 0.00 1.0
29.5 16.2 21.7 7.76 14.5 4.00 68.4
30.6 16.7 19.2 7.26 16.0 3.38 69.0

August
Aug 5 @San Antonio
Aug 7 @Minnesota
Aug 9 @Connecticut
Aug 10 @New York
Aug 13 INDIANA
Aug 16 SACRAMENTO
Aug 19 DETROIT
Aug 21 HOUSTON
Aug 23 MINNESOTA
Aug 26 @San Antonio
Aug 27 @Houston

W 66- 63
L 72- 76
L 51- 64
L 69- 74
W 69- 59
L 63- 72
W 74- 67
W 55- 50
W 74- 63
W 70- 67
L 51- 77

2004 REGULAR SEASON


--FIELD GOALS-- --3-POINT FG-GS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT
34 1150 223 451 .494 6 22 .273
31 965 159 383 .415 38 94 .404
34 1105 108 278 .388 68 165 .412
19 604 65 161 .404 11 37 .297
21 913 119 269 .442 5 11 .455
5 595 77 173 .445 7 16 .438
15 410 52 106 .491 7 26 .269
8 547 66 143 .462 5 11 .455
3 245 16 52 .308 4 17 .235
0 116 10 25 .400 4 11 .364
0 14 1 1 1 .000 1 1 1 .000
0 292 8 25 .320 1 3 .333
0
19 0 2 .000 0 0 ---

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Teasley
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Whitmore
Macchi
Thomas
Lewis
Masciadri
Coker
Weatherspoon
Udoka

G
34
31
34
19
32
34
25
31
24
17
3
34
3

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34 34 -

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO
146 205 .712 60 276 336 88 130 5 50 110
89 108 .824 39 83 122 75 88 0 36 48
52 68 .765 29 87 116 207 89 0 43 103
45 62 .726 35 55 90 3 63 1 23 48
68 87 .782 32 78 110 112 86 0 36 71
49 72 .681 38 68 106 17 73 0 12 34
41 55 .745 23 38 61 14 56 0 21 29
28 41 .683 43 77 120 23 80 0 18 27
7 10 .700
3 19 22 16 9 0 10 17
4 10 .400
1 4 5 8 23 0 1 5
0 0 --1 0 1 3 2 0 0 3
0 0 --6 23 29 32 27 0 12 26
1 4 .250
2 1 3 0 5 0 0 1

6975 904 2069 .437 157 414 .379 530 722 .734
6975 815 2095 .389 174 511 .341 557 761 .732

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Teasley
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Whitmore
Macchi
Thomas
Lewis
Masciadri
Coker
Weatherspoon
Udoka

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


48 20 6 6 8 10
44 8 7 5 5 1
44 6 11 3 9 2
41 8 6 4 8 2
41 8 8 5 8 1
35 9 2 3 4 2
33 13 2 4 4 1
34 10 3 2 4 2
36 5 5 3 3 2
17 1 3 1 1 0
6 1 2 0 2 1
16 5 6 2 3 1
13 2 0 0 1 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

250 46 27 17 28 12 96
250 51 23 15 22 9 93

May
May 22 @Seattle
May 25 @Washington
May 27 @Connecticut
May 29 @Detroit

L 67- 93
W 95- 79
L 73- 82
W 63- 60

June
Jun 1 SEATTLE
Jun 3 @Sacramento
Jun 5 @Houston
Jun 9 CHARLOTTE
Jun 11 MINNESOTA
Jun 14 CONNECTICUT
Jun 18 @Phoenix
Jun 20 @Charlotte
Jun 22 @New York
Jun 25 @Indiana
Jun 27 @Minnesota
Jun 29 NEW YORK

W 73- 70
L 51- 68
L 71- 75
W 82- 68
W 69- 55
W 76- 74(OT)
W 76- 74
L 63- 68(2OT)
W 65- 49
L 67- 71
W 83- 67
W 69- 65(OT)

PTS
31
26
25
20
20
18
16
14
9
7
3
4
1

MIN
33.8
31.1
32.5
31.8
28.5
17.5
16.4
17.6
10.2
6.8
4.7
8.6
6.3

BLK
98
3
7
10
1
5
6
14
2
0
1
1
0

PTS AVG
598 17.6
445 14.4
336 9.9
186 9.8
311 9.7
210 6.2
152 6.1
165 5.3
43 1.8
28 1.6
3 1.0
17 0.5
1 0.3

312 809 1121 626 731 6 262 529 148 2495 73.4
339 727 1066 532 704 8 288 523 114 2361 69.4

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


9.9 2.6 1.47 3.2
3.9 2.4 1.16 1.5
3.4 6.1 1.26 3.0
4.7 1.6 1.21 2.5
3.4 3.5 1.13 2.2
3.1 0.5 0.35 1.0
2.4 0.6 0.84 1.2
3.9 0.7 0.58 0.9
0.9 0.7 0.42 0.7
0.3 0.5 0.06 0.3
0.3 1.0 0.00 1.0
0.9 0.9 0.35 0.8
1.0 0.0 0.00 0.3

BLK PTS
2.88 17.6
0.10 14.4
0.21 9.9
0.53 9.8
0.03 9.7
0.15 6.2
0.24 6.1
0.45 5.3
0.08 1.8
0.00 1.6
0.33 1.0
0.03 0.5
0.00 0.3

205.1 33.0 18.4 7.71 15.6 4.35 73.4


205.1 31.4 15.6 8.47 15.4 3.35 69.4

July
Jul 2 SAN ANTONIO
Jul 7 PHOENIX
Jul 9 @San Antonio
Jul 10 @Houston
Jul 17 SACRAMENTO
Jul 19 INDIANA
Jul 21 WASHINGTON
Jul 23 HOUSTON
Jul 29 @Sacramento
Jul 31 @San Antonio

W 87- 80(OT)
W 73- 71
W 66- 61
W 59- 56
L 70- 79
W 82- 51
W 96- 76
W 70- 67
W 85- 80(2OT)
W 79- 67

September
Sep 1 SAN ANTONIO
Sep 3 SEATTLE
Sep 8 @Phoenix
Sep 9 DETROIT
Sep 12 SACRAMENTO
Sep 14 PHOENIX
Sep 17 MINNESOTA
Sep 18 @Seattle

W 77- 69
W 82- 81
L 58- 72
W 81- 63
W 65- 52
W 73- 60
L 66- 78
W 83- 80

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.7 3.1 4.5 1.74 3.8 3.41 20.8
5.1 3.1 3.6 1.49 2.0 0.12 18.4
4.2 7.5 3.2 1.56 3.7 0.25 12.2
6.0 2.1 4.2 1.52 3.2 0.66 12.3
4.8 4.9 3.8 1.58 3.1 0.04 13.6
7.1 1.1 4.9 0.81 2.3 0.34 14.1
6.0 1.4 5.5 2.05 2.8 0.59 14.8
8.8 1.7 5.9 1.32 2.0 1.02 12.1
3.6 2.6 1.5 1.63 2.8 0.33 7.0
1.7 2.8 7.9 0.34 1.7 0.00 9.7
2.9 8.6 5.7 0.00 8.6 2.86 8.6
4.0 4.4 3.7 1.64 3.6 0.14 2.3
6.3 0.0 10.5 0.00 2.1 0.00 2.1
32.1 17.9 21.0 7.51 15.2 4.24 71.5
30.6 15.3 20.2 8.26 15.0 3.27 67.7

2003 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Dixon
Milton-Jones
Teasley
Byears
Nygaard
Gillom
Mapp
Witherspoon
McCrimmon
Williams
Pride (LA)
Johnson
Mowe

G
23
32
30
31
34
5
11
33
24
23
33
25
4
8
1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

34
34

GS
23
30
30
30
34
0
3
10
4
2
1
3
0
0
0

MIN
792
1042
1042
1086
1189
72
168
397
255
235
299
229
28
45
21

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


165 373 .442
158 388 .407
159 364 .437
139 328 .424
112 288 .389
10 25 .400
16 36 .444
40 97 .412
30 60 .500
17 53 .321
28 63 .444
19 53 .358
0 5 .000
1 5 .200
0 2 .000

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


12 37 .324
28 106 .264
11 52 .212
23 61 .377
70 165 .424
0 1 .000
6 17 .353
7 26 .269
0 1 .000
10 29 .345
5 12 .417
1 16 .063
0 0 --1 5 .200
0 0 ---

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS
82 133 .617 76 155 231 46 93 3 31 65 63 424
97 112 .866 34 107 141 82 105 3 30 74 18 441
83 94 .883 41 85 126 89 83 0 35 69 10 412
115 143 .804 59 161 220 64 109 3 49 79 41 416
98 112 .875 30 145 175 214 68 0 39 108 15 392
8 11 .727 12 9 21 2 12 0 0 2 2 28
3 4 .750 11 8 19 5 22 1 3 4 0 41
16 21 .762 18 37 55 21 65 1 16 9 3 103
2 4 .500 26 42 68 6 45 0 7 12 6 62
12 14 .857
6 13 19 4 17 0 7 7 0 56
7 8 .875
7 22 29 32 20 0 19 17 1 68
10 14 .714
11 21 32 19 25 0 6 7 0 49
1 4 .250
3 3 6 0 9 1 0 3 0
1
3 4 .750
2 4 6 3 6 0 0 4 1
6
0 0 --0 1 1 0 3 0 0 1 1
0

- 6900 894 2140 .418 174 528 .330 537 678 .792
- 6900 866 2147 .403 196 540 .363 504 702 .718

336 813 1149 587 682 12 242 470 161 2499 73.5
316 789 1105 572 654 6 241 468 127 2432 71.5

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Dixon
Milton-Jones
Teasley
Byears
Nygaard
Gillom
Mapp
Witherspoon
McCrimmon
Williams
Pride (LA)
Johnson
Mowe

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


45 14 5 4 5 6
45 10 7 3 8 2
45 8 6 3 7 1
45 13 5 5 6 5
50 11 13 3 9 2
19 7 1 0 2 1
26 5 1 1 1 0
29 9 3 2 1 1
35 11 2 2 2 2
24 8 1 2 3 0
22 4 4 3 2 1
34 5 5 2 1 0
14 4 0 0 2 0
15 4 1 0 2 1
21 1 0 0 1 1

PTS
31
28
28
23
23
7
14
12
12
10
12
13
1
4
0

MIN
34.4
32.6
34.7
35.0
35.0
14.4
15.3
12.0
10.6
10.2
9.1
9.2
7.0
5.6
21.0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

250 43 25
250 47 24

97
92

202.9 33.8 17.3 7.12 13.8 4.74 73.5


202.9 32.5 16.8 7.09 13.8 3.74 71.5

14 26 10
13 21 11

May
May 24 @Connecticut
May 27 @Cleveland
May 28 @Minnesota
May 30 @Seattle

W 82- 73
W 79- 71
W 83- 80
W 77- 74(OT)

June
Jun 5 SACRAMENTO
Jun 7 @Sacramento
Jun 10 MINNESOTA
Jun 12 INDIANA
Jun 14 @New York
Jun 17 @Detroit
Jun 19 SEATTLE
Jun 21 @Phoenix
Jun 24 @Houston
Jun 26 @San Antonio
Jun 28 SACRAMENTO

W 63- 61
W 79- 61
W 76- 75
W 74- 66
W 67- 60
L 78- 87(OT)
L 67- 69
W 54- 48
W 71- 62
W 67- 58
L 60- 69

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


10.0 2.0 1.35 2.8
4.4 2.6 0.94 2.3
4.2 3.0 1.17 2.3
7.1 2.1 1.58 2.5
5.1 6.3 1.15 3.2
4.2 0.4 0.00 0.4
1.7 0.5 0.27 0.4
1.7 0.6 0.48 0.3
2.8 0.3 0.29 0.5
0.8 0.2 0.30 0.3
0.9 1.0 0.58 0.5
1.3 0.8 0.24 0.3
1.5 0.0 0.00 0.8
0.8 0.4 0.00 0.5
1.0 0.0 0.00 1.0

AVG
18.4
13.8
13.7
13.4
11.5
5.6
3.7
3.1
2.6
2.4
2.1
2.0
0.3
0.8
0.0

BLK PTS
2.7 18.4
0.56 13.8
0.33 13.7
1.32 13.4
0.44 11.5
0.40 5.6
0.00 3.7
0.09 3.1
0.25 2.6
0.00 2.4
0.03 2.1
0.00 2.0
0.00 0.3
0.13 0.8
1.00 0.0

July
Jul 5 SEATTLE
Jul 7 CLEVELAND
Jul 9 @Washington
Jul 15 PHOENIX
Jul 18 HOUSTON
Jul 20 CONNECTICUT
Jul 22 WASHINGTON
Jul 24 PHOENIX
Jul 30 SAN ANTONIO
Jul 31 @Sacramento

W 84- 75
W 81- 75
W 97- 91
W 80- 77(2OT)
L 74- 79
L 73- 76
W 77- 73
W 82- 65
L 62- 70
L 75- 83

August
Aug 2 CHARLOTTE
Aug 6 @Seattle
Aug 8 @Phoenix
Aug 9 @San Antonio
Aug 14 @Minnesota
Aug 16 @Houston
Aug 21 MINNESOTA
Aug 23 SAN ANTONIO
Aug 25 HOUSTON

L 73- 84
L 56- 92
W 67- 64
L 52- 69
W 87- 83
W 64- 63
W 88- 65
W 83- 70
W 67- 64

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.7 2.3 4.7 1.57 3.3 3.18 21.4
5.4 3.1 4.0 1.15 2.8 0.69 16.9
4.8 3.4 3.2 1.34 2.6 0.38 15.8
8.1 2.4 4.0 1 .80 2.9 1.51 15.3
5.9 7.2 2.3 1.31 3.6 0.50 13.2
11.7 1.1 6.7 0.00 1.1 1.11 15.6
4.5 1.2 5.2 0.71 1.0 0.00 9.8
5.5 2.1 6.5 1.61 0.9 0.30 10.4
10.7 0.9 7.1 1.10 1.9 0.94 9.7
3.2 0.7 2.9 1.19 1.2 0.00 9.5
3.9 4.3 2.7 2.54 2.3 0.13 9.1
5.6 3.3 4.4 1.05 1.2 0.00 8.6
8.6 0.0 12.9 0.00 4.3 0.00 1.4
5.3 2.7 5.3 0.00 3.6 0.89 5.3
1.9 0.0 5.7 0.00 1.9 1.90 0.0
33.3 17.0 19.8 7.01 13.6 4.67
32.0 16.6 19.0 6.99 13.6 3.68

72.4
70.5

2002 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Byears
Teasley
Witherspoon
Askamp (LA)
Grgin-Fonseca
Hall
McCrimmon
Desouza
Gaither

G
31
32
32
30
26
32
31
20
12
3
32
11
1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

32
32

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROWSGS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA
31 1060 189 406 .466 12 37 .324 133 183
32 1050 188 444 .423 64 175 .366 99 118
25 966 132 271 .487 21 50 .420 77 104
30 958 125 320 .391 20 57 .351 49 59
5 486 76 123 .618 0 0 --- 30 53
32 882 67 166 .404 40 100 .400 30 40
1 358 49 118 .415 28 67 .418 35 46
4 215 26 55 .473 0 1 .000 9 14
0
79 12 31 .387 5 12 .417 2 3
0 19 2 4 .500 0 1 .000 3 4
0 356 20 49 .408 4 15 .267 7 11
0
41 5 14 .357 0 0 --- 2 10
0
5 0 1 .000 0 0 --- 0 0

--REBOUNDS-PCT OFF DEF


.727 78 244
.839 32 135
.740 65 146
.831 18 74
.566 65 76
.750 17 67
.761
9 20
.643 24 25
.667
3 5
.750
1 1
.636
9 14
.200
8 6
--0 1

- 6475 891 2002 .445 194 515 .377 476 645 .738
- 6475 796 2040 .390 163 521 .313 480 649 .740

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Byears
Teasley
Witherspoon
Askamp (TOT)
Askamp (LA)
Grgin-Fonseca
Hall
McCrimmon
Desouza
Gaither

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


44 21 8 5 7 7
43 10 9 5 6 1
42 14 3 4 7 3
42 5 8 3 6 2
32 11 4 2 2 2
39 7 9 3 5 2
21 4 4 2 3 1
38 12 1 2 3 1
38 12 1 2 3 1
12 2 1 1 2 0
12 1 1 1 1 0
33 3 6 4 3 1
8 4 1 1 2 0
5 1 1 0 1 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 46 27 14 27
225 43 21 16 20

May
May 25 NEW YORK
May 27 @Houston
May 30 @Miami

W 72- 64
W 68- 55
W 69- 65

June
Jun 1 @Charlotte
Jun 3 PORTLAND
Jun 8 @Minnesota
Jun 11 DETROIT
Jun 15 @Sacramento
Jun 18 @Seattle
Jun 21 MINNESOTA
Jun 25 PHOENIX
Jun 27 WASHINGTON
Jun 28 @Phoenix
Jun 30 HOUSTON

L 87- 94(OT)
W 89- 72
W 76- 72
W 90- 80
W 72- 66(OT)
W 80- 68
W 73- 64
W 89- 66
W 73- 69
W 84- 72
L 58- 60

TOT AST PF
322 83 123
167 92 90
211 45 122
92 119 74
141 13 89
84 140 63
29 29 27
49 4 25
8 1 11
2 1 2
23 53 22
14 2 14
1 1 2

DQ
7
1
3
2
4
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

STL
46
38
50
28
19
25
13
11
1
1
22
3
0

TO BLK PTS AVG


108 90 523 16.9
62 9 539 16.8
94 35 362 11.3
82 5 319 10.6
20 4 182 7.0
68 9 204 6.4
22 2 161 5.2
11 4 61 3.1
8 0 31 2.6
1 0
7 2.3
24 3 51 1.6
6 0 12 1.1
1 0
0 0.0

329 814 1143 583 664 18 257 517 161 2452 76.6
314 645 959 508 623 6 275 453 111 2235 69.8

-- AVERAGE PER GAME --CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)PTS MIN REB AST STL TO BLK PTS
FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
30
34.2 10.4 2.7 1.48 3.5 2.90 16.9
12.2 3.1 4.6 1.74 4.1 3.40 19.7
32
32.8 5.2 2.9 1.19 1.9 0.28 16.8
6.4 3.5 3.4 1.45 2.4 0.34 20.5
23
30.2 6.6 1.4 1.56 2.9 1.09 11.3
8.7 1.9 5.1 2.07 3.9 1.45 15.0
20
31.9 3.1 4.0 0.93 2.7 0.17 10.6
3.8 5.0 3.1 1.17 3.4 0.21 13.3
15
18.7 5.4 0.5 0.73 0.8 0.15 7.0
11.6 1.1 7.3 1.56 1.6 0.33 15.0
18
27.6 2.6 4.4 0.78 2.1 0.28 6.4
3.8 6.3 2.9 1.13 3.1 0.41 9.3
19
11.5 0.9 0.9 0.42 0.7 0.06 5.2
3.2 3.2 3.0 1.45 2.5 0.22 18.0
12
11.0 2.3 0.3 0.46 0.5 0.19 2.8
8.4 1.0 4.7 1.67 1.7 0.70 10.0
12
10.8 2.5 0.2 0.55 0.6 0.20 3.1
9.1 0.7 4.7 2.05 2.0 0.74 11.3
8
6.6 0.7 0.1 0.08 0.7 0.00 2.6
4.1 0.5 5.6 0.51 4.1 0.00 15.7
4
6.3 0.7 0.3 0.33 0.3 0.00 2.3
4.2 2.1 4.2 2.11 2.1 0.00 14.7
7
11.1 0.7 1.7 0.69 0.8 0.09 1.6
2.6 6.0 2.5 2.47 2.7 0.34 5.7
4
3.7 1.3 0.2 0.27 0.5 0.00 1.1
13.7 2.0 13.7 2.93 5.9 0.00 11.7
0
5.0 1.0 1.0 0.00 1.0 0.00 0.0
8.0 8.0 16.0 0.00 8.0 0.00 0.0

9 102
9 94

202.3 35.7 18.2 8.03 16.2 5.03 76.6


202.3 30.0 15.9 8.59 14.2 3.47 69.8

July
Jul 5 SACRAMENTO
Jul 7 UTAH
Jul 11 @Seattle
Jul 12 @Portland
Jul 17 @Indiana
Jul 18 @New York
Jul 20 @Cleveland
Jul 22 ORLANDO
Jul 24 PORTLAND
Jul 28 INDIANA
Jul 30 MIAMI

W 87- 65
W102- 75
L 60- 79
W 82- 76(OT)
W 73- 58
L 59- 72
W 63- 50
W 92- 84
W 73- 69
W 80- 62
L 73- 82

August
Aug 1 SEATTLE
Aug 3 @Sacramento
Aug 4 UTAH
Aug 8 HOUSTON
Aug 9 @Utah
Aug 11 @Minnesota
Aug 13 @Phoenix

L 76- 81
W 81- 71
W 90- 86
L 64- 67
W 85- 77
W 69- 58
W 63- 56

35.3 18.0 20.5 7.94 16.0 4.97 75.7


29.6 15.7 19.2 8.49 14.0 3.43 69.0

2001 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Dixon
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Byears
Figgs
Mapp
Grgin-Fonseca
McCrimmon
Levandusky
Willits

G
31
29
28
32
32
32
30
24
28
13
13

GS
31
29
24
27
13
29
0
7
0
0
0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

32 32 -

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROWSMIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA
1033 221 467 .473 22 60 .367 142 193
925 133 319 .417 6 34 .176 68 86
828 99 256 .387 47 123 .382 68 79
938 134 296 .453 12 35 .343 50 63
739 133 221 .602 1 3 .333 30 52
930 76 179 .425 54 117 .462 51 63
395 51 123 .415 0 3 .000 24 32
223 28 65 .431 6 19 .316 9 14
350 28 63 .444 5 12 .417 3 7
67 7 22 .318 5 17 .294 1 1 1
47 6 20 .300 2 13 .154 3 4

--REBOUNDS-PCT OFF DEF


.736 88 210
.791 19 66
.861 22 108
.794 71 98
.577 80 103
.810 14 86
.750 34 45
.643 13 22
.429
3 9
.000
5 4
.750
1 4

6475 916 2031 .451 160 436 .367 449 594 .756
6475 779 1985 .392 192 603 .318 416 547 .761

PLAYER
Leslie
Dixon
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Byears
Figgs
Mapp
Grgin-Fonseca
McCrimmon
Levandusky
Willits

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


43 16 7 3 8 7
40 5 8 4 6 1
40 9 8 4 4 3
43 11 4 5 5 2
35 17 3 6 6 3
40 6 9 4 5 1
27 7 2 4 3 2
19 4 3 1 3 1
25 3 7 4 3 0
9 2 3 2 2 1
10 2 2 1 1 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 48 29 17 23 13 100
225 40 25 17 23 8 95

May
May 21 @Seattle
May 25 @Minnesota
May 26 @Washington
May 28 @Charlotte
May 31 SAN ANTONIO

W 68- 50
L 65- 68
W 84- 75
L 75- 84
W 81- 70

June
Jun 4 @Sacramento
Jun 8 PHOENIX
Jun 11 SACRAMENTO
Jun 15 HOUSTON
Jun 18 MINNESOTA
Jun 20 CONNECTICUT
Jun 24 SEATTLE
Jun 26 @Detroit
Jun 28 @Indiana

L 53- 81
L 63- 66
W 81- 74
W 83- 64
W 69- 56
L 70- 90
W 76- 65
L 73- 79
W 61- 58

July
Jul 2 PHOENIX
Jul 5 NEW YORK
Jul 12 CHARLOTTE
Jul 16 SEATTLE
Jul 19 WASHINGTON
Jul 23 @Houston
Jul 26 @Phoenix
Jul 29 @Sacramento
Jul 31 @Seattle

W 86- 63
L 55- 67
W 71- 59
L 70- 78
L 68- 74
W 69- 59
L 60- 77
L 59- 79
L 72- 77

PTS
32
24
23
20
17
17
12
12
11
6
5

MIN
33.3
31.9
29.6
29.3
23.1
29.1
13.2
9.3
12.5
5.2
3.6

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


9.6 2.4 1.10 3.2
2.9 3.9 0.93 2.4
4.6 3.1 1.39 1.6
5.3 2.1 1.53 1.8
5.7 0.9 1.31 1.2
3.1 3.9 1.34 1.7
2.6 0.5 0.53 0.8
1.5 0.5 0.17 0.6
0.4 2.3 0.75 0.8
0.7 0.5 0.38 0.4
0.4 0.2 0.08 0.2

W 66- 63
L 72- 76
L 51- 64
L 69- 74
W 69- 59
L 63- 72
W 74- 67
W 55- 50
W 74- 63
W 70- 67
L 51- 77

DQ
3
2
0
0
4
0
0
0
0
0
0

STL
34
27
39
49
42
43
16
4
21
5
1

TO
98
71
44
58
38
55
25
15
22
5
2

BLK
71
2
11
29
13
4
6
1
0
1
0

PTS
606
340
313
330
297
257
126
71
64
20
17

AVG
19.5
11.7
11.2
10.3
9.3
8.0
4.2
3.0
2.3
1.5
1.3

350 755 1105 596 616 9 281 438 138 2441 76.3
294 627 921 538 591 8 234 453 114 2166 67.7
BLK PTS
2.29 19.5
0.07 11.7
0.39 11.2
0.91 10.3
0.41 9.3
0.13 8.0
0.20 4.2
0.04 3.0
0.00 2.3
0.08 1.5
0.00 1.3

202.3 34.5 18.6 8.78 13.7 4.31 76.3


202.3 28.8 16.8 7.31 14.2 3.56 67.7

August
Aug 5 @San Antonio
Aug 7 @Minnesota
Aug 9 @Connecticut
Aug 10 @New York
Aug 13 INDIANA
Aug 16 SACRAMENTO
Aug 19 DETROIT
Aug 21 HOUSTON
Aug 23 MINNESOTA
Aug 26 @San Antonio
Aug 27 @Houston

TOT AST PF
298 73 132
85 114 52
130 87 74
169 68 101
183 29 112
100 126 42
79 14 60
35 12 21
12 63 19
9 7 3
5 3 0

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.5 2.8 5.1 1.32 3.8 2.75 23.5
3.7 4.9 2.2 1.17 3.1 0.09 14.7
6.3 4.2 3.6 1.88 2.1 0.53 15.1
7.2 2.9 4.3 2.09 2.5 1.24 14.1
9.9 1.6 6.1 2.27 2.1 0.70 16.1
4.3 5.4 1.8 1.85 2.4 0.17 11.1
8.0 1.4 6.1 1.62 2.5 0.61 12.8
6.3 2.2 3.8 0.72 2.7 0.18 12.7
1.4 7.2 2.2 2.40 2.5 0.00 7.3
5.4 4.2 1.8 2.99 3.0 0.60 11.9
4.3 2.6 0.0 0.85 1.7 0.00 14.5
34.1 18.4 19.0 8.68 13.5 4.26 75.4
28.4 16.6 18.3 7.23 14.0 3.52 66.9

2000 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Figgs
Feaster
Machanguana
McCrimmon
Grgin-Fonseca
Sauer
Frett

G
32
32
32
31
32
32
31
32
18
12
25

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

32
32

GS
32
32
32
31
32
0
1
0
0
0
0

MIN
1028
940
983
882
803
469
421
488
183
66
187

--FIELD GOALS-FG FGA PCT


197 430 .458
130 335 .388
150 293 .512
132 291 .454
66 153 .431
60 167 .359
48 83 .578
39 77 .506
17 62 .274
8 14 .571
14 51 .275

--3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT


7 32 .219
61 159 .384
2 8 .250
12 34 .353
29 82 .354
22 85 .259
0 1 .000
16 33 .485
1 17 .059
0 0 --0 1 .000

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO
169 205 .824 75 231 306 60 134 7 31 103
73 89 .820 45 134 179 98 117 2 58 51
76 102 .745 55 139 194 68 124 3 44 67
62 77 .805
34 71 105 96 86 0 40 60
54 65 .831 14 41 55 127 53 0 21 43
60 72 .833 36 49 85 33 47 0 23 35
14 25 .560 20 52 72 18 66 1 13 19
7 14 .500
9 23 32 65 41 0 29 48
14 23 .609
9 14 23 12 17 0 3 14
4 5 .800
3 13 16 3 10 0 2 6
12 16 .750
8 16 24 6 10 0 7 13

- 6450 861 1956 .440 150 452 .332 545 693 .786
- 6450 776 1963 .395 122 413 .295 495 692 .715

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Dixon
Figgs
Feaster
Machanguana
McCrimmon
Grgin-Fonseca
Sauer
Frett

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


39 16 5 4 6 6
39 12 7 4 6 3
40 14 6 4 6 3
38 7 8 5 5 2
34 5 9 3 5 1
26 7 4 2 3 1
30 5 3 3 3 2
22 3 6 3 5 2
17 3 2 1 2 1
14 3 1 1 2 1
17 5 1 2 4 1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 43 28
225 42 19

15 23
15 24

May
May 31 UTAH

W 69- 62

June
Jun 3 @Minnesota
Jun 6 PORTLAND
Jun 10 PHOENIX
Jun 11 @Sacramento
Jun 13 @Seattle
Jun 17 @Portland
Jun 18 CHARLOTTE
Jun 20 HOUSTON
Jun 23 @Miami
Jun 25 @New York
Jun 26 @Washington
Jun 28 @Indiana

W 82- 75
W 70- 57
W 76- 57
L 68- 75
L 59- 69(OT)
W 94- 81
W 70- 62
W 90- 84
W 68- 54
W 72- 67
W 74- 72
W 82- 73

PTS
30
26
20
24
15
18
10
9
8
7
6

9 94
7 89

MIN
32.1
29.4
30.7
28.5
25.1
14.7
13.6
15.3
10.2
5.5
7.5

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


9.6 1.9 0.97 3.2
5.6 3.1 1.81 1.6
6.1 2.1 1.38 2.1
3.4 3.1 1.29 1.9
1.7 4.0 0.66 1.3
2.7 1.0 0.72 1.1
2.3 0.6 0.42 0.6
1.0 2.0 0.91 1.5
1.3 0.7 0.17 0.8
1.3 0.3 0.17 0.5
1.0 0.2 0.28 0.5

BLK
74
18
29
10
3
2
4
8
1
1
6

PTS
570
394
378
338
215
202
110
101
49
20
40

AVG
17.8
12.3
11.8
10.9
6.7
6.3
3.5
3.2
2.7
1.7
1.6

308 783 1091 586 705 13 271 466 156 2417 75.5
300 678 978 445 650 12 243 485 105 2169 67.8
BLK PTS
2.31 17.8
0.56 12.3
0.91 11.8
0.32 10.9
0.09 6.7
0.06 6.3
0.13 3.5
0.25 3.2
0.06 2.7
0.08 1.7
0.24 1.6

201.6 34.1 18.3 8.47 14.6 4.88 75.5


201.6 30.6 13.9 7.59 15.2 3.28 67.8

July
Jul 1 CLEVELAND
Jul 2 DETROIT
Jul 5 @Sacramento
Jul 6 WASHINGTON
Jul 9 UTAH
Jul 11 PORTLAND
Jul 14 HOUSTON
Jul 15 MINNESOTA
Jul 20 NEW YORK
Jul 21 @Phoenix
Jul 23 SACRAMENTO
Jul 25 ORLANDO
Jul 27 SEATTLE
Jul 29 @Houston
Jul 31 @Minnesota

W 75- 67
W 85- 63
W 76- 61
W 79- 70
W 92- 72
L 77- 80
W 63- 58
W 58- 57
W 82- 66
W 74- 68
W 73- 68
W 78- 63
W 76- 63
W 84- 74
W 73- 66

August
Aug 2 @Detroit
Aug 5 @Phoenix
Aug 8 @Seattle
Aug 9 @Utah

W 84- 81
W 77- 63
W 60- 52(OT)
L 77- 89

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.9 2.3 5.2 1.21 4.0 2.88 22.2
7.6 4.2 5.0 2.47 2.2 0.77 16.8
7.9 2.8 5.0 1.79 2.7 1.18 15.4
4.8 4.4 3.9 1.81 2.7 0.45 15.3
2.7 6.3 2.6 1.05 2.1 0.15 10.7
7.2 2.8 4.0 1.96 3.0 0.17 17.2
6.8 1.7 6.3 1.24 1.8 0.38 10.5
2.6 5.3 3.4 2.38 3.9 0.66 8.3
5.0 2.6 3.7 0.66 3.1 0.22 10.7
9.7 1.8 6.1 1.21 3.6 0.61 12.1
5.1 1.3 2.1 1.50 2.8 1.28 8.6
33.8 18.2 21.9 8.40 14.4 4.84 74.9
30.3 13.8 20.2 7.53 15.0 3.26 67.3

1999 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Grubin
Dixon
Frett
Feaster
Toler
Bjedov
Figgs
Machanguana
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

G
32
32
32
32
32
31
32
30
27
22
28
32
32

--FIELD GOALS-- --3-POINT FG-- --FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-GS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
32 930 182 389 .468 22 52 .423 114 156 .731
72 176 248 56 136 4 36 94 49 500 15.6
28 938 125 336 .372 41 146 .281 56 78 .718
42 111 153 112 100 1 44 58 15 347 10.8
32 835 125 236 .530 0 1 .000 68 86 .791 60 116 176 50 112 0 47 71 17 318 9.9
18 708 96 238 .403 40 93 .430 52 68 .765 18 54 72 90 53 1 24 53 2 284 8.9
14 563 77 199 .387 15 48 .313 48 65 .738 17 49 66 53 42 0 17 39 4 217 6.8
18 658 77 162 .475 0 0 --- 34 43 .791 48 46 94 63 42 0 9 26 5 188 6.1
4 410 51 103 .495 21 57 .368 39 57 .684 28 30 58 32 51 0 15 28 7 162 5.1
4 427 51 150 .340 2 13 .154 39 45 .867 12 31 43 66 36 0 13 40 0 143 4.8
0 431 52 100 .520 8 19 .421 9 18 .500
21 49 70 17 60 0 9 25 22 121 4.5
10 330 30 82 .366 14 47 .298 21 24 .875
8 27 35 33 27 0 15 31 0 95 4.3
0 245 24 49 .490 0 0 --- 26 36 .722 16 36 52 9 34 0 8 14 3 74 2.6
- 6475 890 2044 .435 163 476 .342 506 676 .749 342 725 1067 581 693 6 237 484 124 2449 76.5
- 6475 818 1993 .410 147 445 .330 535 721 .742 335 696 1031 511 681 6 250 493 99 2318 72.4

PLAYER
Leslie
Mabika
Milton-Jones
Grubin
Dixon
Frett
Feaster
Toler
Bjedov
Figgs
Machanguana

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


43 18 5 6 5 6
43 11 7 6 4 3
38 12 4 5 6 3
39 6 6 4 5 1
32 6 6 3 4 1
37 10 8 1 5 1
26 7 4 2 4 2
29 6 7 3 4 0
38 8 2 2 3 3
28 4 5 4 4 0
20 5 2 2 2 1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

250 44 27 14 24 11 102
250 43 26 15 30 7 89

June
Jun 10 SACRAMENTO
Jun 12 @Cleveland
Jun 15 @Orlando
Jun 18 @New York
Jun 19 @Charlotte
Jun 22 @Houston
Jun 24 MINNESOTA
Jun 26 @Sacramento
Jun 28 UTAH

W100- 78
W 75- 59
L 86- 88
L 72- 84
W 73- 69
L 76- 84
L 73- 86
W 76- 73
W102- 70

July
Jul 1 @Minnesota
Jul 2 @Detroit
Jul 5 CLEVELAND
Jul 7 @Phoenix
Jul 9 SACRAMENTO
Jul 11 PHOENIX
Jul 17 @Phoenix
Jul 18 HOUSTON
Jul 21 PHOENIX
Jul 24 NEW YORK
Jul 27 ORLANDO
Jul 30 UTAH
Jul 31 WASHINGTON

W 81- 77(2OT)
W 91- 81
W 74- 72
W 67- 61
L 72- 77
W 67- 58
L 76- 84
W 78- 65
W 84- 63
W 75- 72(OT)
W 81- 60
W 87- 77
W 81- 64

PTS
30
20
20
20
14
15
16
21
17
15
8

MIN
29.1
29.3
26.1
22.1
17.6
21.2
12.8
14.2
16.0
15.0
8.8

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


7.8 1.8 1.13 2.9
4.8 3.5 1.38 1.8
5.5 1.6 1.47 2.2
2.3 2.8 0.75 1.7
2.1 1.7 0.53 1.2
3.0 2.0 0.29 0.8
1.8 1.0 0.47 0.9
1.4 2.2 0.43 1.3
2.6 0.6 0.33 0.9
1.6 1.5 0.68 1.4
1.9 0.3 0.29 0.5

BLK PTS
1.53 15.6
0.47 10.8
0.53 9.9
0.06 8.9
0.13 6.8
0.16 6.1
0.22 5.1
0.00 4.8
0.81 4.5
0.00 4.3
0.11 2.6

202.3 33.3 18.2 7.41 15.1 3.88 76.5


202.3 32.2 16.0 7.81 15.4 3.09 72.4
August
Aug 5 @Utah
Aug 6 @Minnesota
Aug 9 DETROIT
Aug 10 @Sacramento
Aug 14 @Washington
Aug 16 CHARLOTTE
Aug 18 MINNESOTA
Aug 20 HOUSTON
Aug 21 @Utah

L 75- 81
W 77- 59
L 59- 84
L 80- 82
L 53- 55
W 76- 65
W 72- 54
W 68- 64
L 81- 89

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
10.7 2.4 5.8 1.55 4.0 2.11 21.5
6.5 4.8 4.3 1.88 2.5 0.64 14.8
8.4 2.4 5.4 2.25 3.4 0.81 15.2
4.1 5.1 3.0 1.36 3.0 0.11 16.0
4.7 3.8 3.0 1.21 2.8 0.28 15.4
5.7 3.8 2.6 0.55 1.6 0.30 11.4
5.7 3.1 5.0 1.46 2.7 0.68 15.8
4.0 6.2 3.4 1.22 3.7 0.00 13.4
6.5 1.6 5.6 0.84 2.3 2.04 11.2
4.2 4.0 3.3 1.82 3.8 0.00 11.5
8.5 1.5 5.6 1.31 2.3 0.49 12.1
33.0 17.9 21.4 7.32 14.9 3.83 75.6
31.8 15.8 21.0 7.72 15.2 3.06 71.6

1998 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Dixon
Toler
Mabika
Zheng
McGee
VanEmbricqs
Feaster
Alexander
Colleton
Blue
Rycraw
Wideman
Reed
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

G
28
22
30
29
6
30
28
3
8
30
30
20
25
9
30
30

GS
28
22
30
23
2
22
2
0
0
14
3
4
0
0
-

MIN
898
710
945
710
98
570
470
41
73
575
331
226
329
49
6025
6025

--FIELD GOALS-- --3-POINT FG-FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT


202 423 .478 9 23 .391
124 283 .438 21 59 .356
145 349 .415 25 60 .417
87 257 .339 33 107 .308
20 32 .625 0 0 --80 183 .437 0 4 .000
43 89 .483 0 0 --3 14 .214 2 10 .200
7 22 .318 6 16 .375
30 99 .303 5 19 .263
26 77 .338 6 21 .286
15 32 .469 0 0 --12 43 .279 3 12 .250
3 11 .273 1 4 .250
797 1914 .416 111 335 .331
780 1898 .411 119 372 .320

PLAYER
Leslie
Dixon
Toler
Mabika
Zheng
McGee
VanEmbricqs
Feaster
Alexander
Colleton
Blue
Rycraw
Wideman
Reed

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


41 21 6 6 7 6
38 6 5 5 5 1
40 7 14 6 6 1
36 10 5 3 5 2
24 8 1 0 2 1
32 12 2 4 5 3
31 6 3 3 3 4
21 2 2 1 2 0
15 5 3 2 2 0
38 6 4 4 5 3
38 7 2 3 4 1
25 8 1 2 3 4
23 3 5 2 4 1
9 4 1 1 2 1

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

225 43 24 16 25 9 89
225 46 26 13 27 9 92

June
Jun 11 @Utah
Jun 14 @Phoenix
Jun 16 @Sacramento
Jun 19 NEW YORK
Jun 21 HOUSTON
Jun 24 CHARLOTTE
Jun 27 @Houston
Jun 30 @Sacramento

W 89- 83
L 60- 70
L 69- 73
W 78- 75
L 63- 79
L 73- 77
L 64- 75
L 56- 58

July
Jul 2 UTAH
Jul 7 CHARLOTTE
Jul 8 SACRAMENTO
Jul 12 CLEVELAND
Jul 13 @Phoenix
Jul 15 SACRAMENTO
Jul 17 HOUSTON
Jul 21 NEW YORK
Jul 23 PHOENIX
Jul 25 @Detroit
Jul 27 @Cleveland
Jul 29 @Washington
Jul 31 PHOENIX

L 57- 58
W 86- 79
L 71- 76
W 87- 66
L 62- 72
W 81-76(OT)
L 68- 74
L 77- 92
W 70- 68
L 67- 69
L 67- 83
W 77- 68
W 71- 56

PTS
30
26
22
17
19
18
9
5
10
14
13
8
9
7

MIN
32.1
32.3
31.5
24.5
16.3
19.0
16.8
13.7
9.1
19.2
11.0
11.3
13.2
5.4

--FREE THROWS-- --REBOUNDS-FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVGG
136 177 .768 77 208 285 70 121 3 42 102 60 549 19.6
88 113 .779 13 43 56 54 67 2 24 57 8 357 16.2
55 74 .743 37 69 106 143 77 2 32 101 3 370 12.3
30 43 .698 29 98 127 44 73 0 30 37 9 237 8.2
5 7 .714
8 18 26 3 11 0 0 6 1 45 7.5
43 70 .614 62 83 145 13 104 0 23 54 24 203 6.8
8 16 .500 34 41 75 16 57 0 24 19 9 94 3.4
2 2 1.000
1 1 2 3 10 0 2 4 0 10 3.3
2 2 1.000
8 7 15 6 11 0 2 7 0 22 2.8
15 18 .833 25 26 51 47 44 0 18 29 11 80 2.7
15 24 .625 19 30 49 10 41 0 13 27 3 73 2.4
16 22 .727 17 33 50 4 27 0 7 14 18 46 2.3
21 29 .724
5 17 22 57 28 0 10 34 1 48 1.9
7 12 .583
2 9 11 2 4 0 2 6 1 14 1.6
443 609 .727 337 683 1020 472 675 7 229 511 148 2148 71.6
490 693 .707 337 663 1000 522 603 4 244 481 109 2169 72.3

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


10.2 2.5 1.50 3.6
2.5 2.5 1.09 2.6
3.5 4.8 1.07 3.4
4.4 1.5 1.03 1.3
4.3 0.5 0.00 1.0
4.8 0.4 0.77 1.8
2.7 0.6 0.86 0.7
0.7 1.0 0.67 1.3
1.9 0.8 0.25 0.9
1.7 1.6 0.60 1.0
1.6 0.3 0.43 0.9
2.5 0.2 0.35 0.7
0.9 2.3 0.40 1.4
1.2 0.2 0.22 0.7

BLK PTS
2.14 19.6
0.36 16.2
0.10 12.3
0.31 8.2
0.17 7.5
0.80 6.8
0.32 3.4
0.00 3.3
0.00 2.8
0.37 2.7
0.10 2.4
0.90 2.3
0.04 1.9
0.11 1.6

200.8 34.0 15.7 7.63 17.0 4.93 71.6


200.8 33.3 17.4 8.13 16.0 3.63 72.3

August
Aug 1 @Utah
Aug 3 WASHINGTON
Aug 5 @Detroit
Aug 8 @New York
Aug 9 @Washington
Aug 12 @Charlotte
Aug 14 UTAH
Aug 16 DETROIT
Aug 19 @Houston

W 73- 65
W 86- 72
L 61- 73
L 62- 80
L 74- 76
W 65- 52
W 87- 67
L 76- 77
L 71- 80

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
12.7 3.1 5.4 1.87 4.5 2.67 24.5
3.2 3.0 3.8 1.35 3.2 0.45 20.1
4.5 6.1 3.3 1.35 4.3 0.13 15.7
7.2 2.5 4.1 1.69 2.1 0.51 13.4
10.6 1.2 4.5 0.00 2.4 0.41 18.4
10.2 0.9 7.3 1.61 3.8 1.68 14.2
6.4 1.4 4.9 2.04 1.6 0.77 8.0
2.0 2.9 9.8 1.95 3.9 0.00 9.8
8.2 3.3 6.0 1.10 3.8 0.00 12.1
3.5 3.3 3.1 1.25 2.0 0.77 5.6
5.9 1.2 5.0 1.57 3.3 0.36 8.8
8.8 0.7 4.8 1.24 2.5 3.19 8.1
2.7 6.9 3.4 1.22 4.1 0.12 5.8
9.0 1.6 3.3 1.63 4.9 0.82 11.4
33.9 15.7 22.4 7.60 17.0 4.91 71.3
33.2 17.3 20.0 8.10 16.0 3.62 72.0

1997 REGULAR SEASON


PLAYER
Leslie
Toler
Dixon
Zheng
Burgess
Mabika
Colleton
Burge
Wideman
Charles
Gant
Gessig
SPARKS
OPPONENTS

G
28
28
27
28
28
21
28
22
28
28
2
1
28
28

-FIELD GOALS- -3-POINT FG-- -FREE THROWS- --REBOUNDS-GS MIN FG FGA PCT FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF
28 902 160 371 .431 12 46 .261 113 189 .598 63 203 266 74 99
28 907 144 338 .426 7 38 .184 73 87 .839 25 69 94 143 66
21 715 115 252 .456 22 52 .423 68 88 .773 22 59 81 55 76
21 557 110 178 .618 0 0 --- 39 59 .661 32 91 123 17 77
6 492 73 135 .541 1 2 .500 36 49 .735 46 71 117 9 46
1 325 53 136 .390 7 38 .184 13 24 .542 22 32 54 22 48
14 613 55 126 .437 9 25 .360 17 30 .567 25 35 60 45 46
6 282 32 72 .444 0 4 .000 23 45 .511 23 46 69 15 52
14 633 25 106 .236 7 36 .194 27 34 .794 16 41 57 103 44
1 282 27 67 .403 0 1 .000 10 15 .667 16 32 48 12 41
0
13 0 1 .000 0 0 --- 0 0 --0 3 3 0 4
0
4 0 0 --- 0 0 --0 0 --0 1 1 0 2
- 5725 794 1782 .446 65 242 .269 419 620 .676 290 683 973 495 601
- 5725 719 1812 .397 95 343 .277 477 649 .735 323 597 920 457 575

PLAYER
Leslie
Toler
Dixon
Zheng
Burgess
Mabika
Colleton
Burge
Wideman
Charles
Gant
Gessig

-- SINGLE-GAME HIGHS -MIN REB AST ST TO BL


42 16 7 4 7 6
39 8 10 4 7 2
44 9 4 5 4 3
36 10 2 2 5 3
33 9 2 4 5 3
26 9 3 4 5 2
43 6 5 5 4 2
32 11 2 3 4 2
43 5 8 3 5 1
18 4 2 2 2 2
8 3 0 0 1 0
4 1 0 0 1 0

SPARKS
OPPONENTS

250 50 25
250 49 26

PTS
28
19
25
28
20
12
9
14
16
8
0
0

20 25 9 93
17 28 7 102

June
21 NEW YORK
23 @Utah
25 CHARLOTTE
27 SACRAMENTO
30 @Houston

L 57- 67
L 89-102
W 74- 54
W 93- 73
L 66- 71(OT)

July
3 @Cleveland
5 @Charlotte
7 CLEVELAND
11 UTAH
13 PHOENIX
15 @Sacramento
16 HOUSTON
19 @New York
21 @Charlotte
23 CLEVELAND
25 @Phoenix
27 @Sacramento
30 UTAH

W 74- 62
L 66- 78
L 70- 81
W 75- 68
L 56- 57
L 73- 78
W 77- 52
L 57- 69
L 64- 75
L 85- 89
W 86- 83(OT)
W 84- 62
W 91- 69

DQ
1
3
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
6
3

STL
39
36
49
11
20
23
35
12
24
10
0
0
259
287

TO
109
107
58
46
47
27
35
25
51
14
2
1
528
505

BLK
59
3
5
20
13
6
9
12
1
10
0
0
138
82

PTS
445
368
320
259
183
126
136
87
84
64
0
0
2072
2010

AVG
15.9
13.1
11.9
9.3
6.5
6.0
4.9
4.0
3.0
2.3
0.0
0.0
74.0
71.8

-- AVERAGE PER GAME -REB AST STL TO


9.5 2.6 1.39 3.9
3.4 5.1 1.29 3.8
3.0 2.0 1.81 2.1
4.4 0.6 0.39 1.6
4.2 0.3 0.71 1.7
2.6 1.0 1.10 1.3
2.1 1.6 1.25 1.3
3.1 0.7 0.55 1.1
2.0 3.7 0.86 1.8
1.7 0.4 0.36 0.5
1.5 0.0 0.00 1.0
1.0 0.0 0.00 1.0

BLK PTS
2.11 15.9
0.11 13.1
0.19 11.9
0.71 9.3
0.46 6.5
0.29 6.0
0.32 4.9
0.55 4.0
0.04 3.0
0.36 2.3
0.00 0.0
0.00 0.0

-CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
11.8 3.3 4.4 1.73 4.8 2.62 19.7
4.1 6.3 2.9 1.59 4.7 0.13 16.2
4.5 3.1 4.3 2.74 3.2 0.28 17.9
8.8 1.2 5.5 0.79 3.3 1.44 18.6
9.5 0.7 3.7 1.63 3.8 1.06 14.9
6.6 2.7 5.9 2.83 3.3 0.74 15.5
3.9 2.9 3.0 2.28 2.3 0.59 8.9
9.8 2.1 7.4 1.70 3.5 1.70 12.3
3.6 6.5 2.8 1.52 3.2 0.06 5.3
6.8 1.7 5.8 1.42 2.0 1.42 9.1
9.2 0.0 12.3 0.00 6.2 0.00 0.0
10.0 0.0 20.0 0.00 10.0 0.00 0.0

204.5 34.8 17.7 9.25 18.9


204.5 32.9 16.3 10.25 18.0

4.93 74.0
2.93 71.8

34.0 17.3 21.0 9.05 18.4 4.82 72.4


32.1 16.0 20.1 10.03 17.6 2.86 70.2

MIN
32.2
32.4
26.5
19.9
17.6
15.5
21.9
12.8
22.6
10.1
6.5
4.0

August
1 HOUSTON
3 CHARLOTTE
5 @New York
7 @Cleveland
9 @Houston
16 @Utah
18 PHOENIX
20 NEW YORK
22 SACRAMENTO
24 @Phoenix

L 57- 81
L 70- 77
W 67- 50
W 87- 84(2OT)
L 71- 72
W 74- 64
W 75- 66
W 78- 76
W 88- 77
L 68- 73(OT)

PLAYOFFS
*** 1999 POSTSEASON
Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 24 SACRAMENTO W 71- 58 1-0 0-0 1-0
Aug 26 HOUSTON W 75- 60 2-0 0-0 2-0

High Scoring
Leslie-22
Leslie-23

Aug 29 @Houston
Aug 30 @Houston

Leslie-11
Leslie-20

L 55- 83
L 62- 72

2-0 0-1 2-1


2-0 0-2 2-2

High Rebounds
Leslie-12
Frett-7
Leslie-7
Leslie-8
Leslie-7

*** 2000 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 11 @Phoenix W 86- 71 0-0 1-0 1-0
Aug 13 PHOENIX
W101- 76 1-0 1-0 2-0

High Scoring
Leslie-20
Leslie-29

Aug 17 @Houston

L 56- 77

1-0 1-1 2-1

Mabika-21

High Rebounds
Leslie-11
Mabika-8
Leslie-8
Leslie-8

Aug 20 HOUSTON

L 69- 74 1-1 1-1 2-2

Mabika-19

Leslie-14

*** 2001 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent
Aug 18 @Houston
Aug 20 HOUSTON
Aug 24 @Sacramento

Team/Opp
W 64- 59
W 70- 58
W 74- 73

High Rebounds
Leslie-11
Leslie-18
Leslie-10

Aug 26 SACRAMENTO L 60- 80 1-1 2-0 3-1


Aug 27 SACRAMENTO W 93- 62 2-1 2-0 4-1
Aug 30 @Charlotte W 75- 66 2-1 3-0 5-1

High Scoring
Leslie-19
Leslie-28
Mabika-15
Milton-Jones-15
Leslie-13
Leslie-35
Leslie-24

Sep 1

Leslie-24

Mabika-11
Leslie-16
Leslie-8
Milton-Jones-8
Leslie-13

*** 2002 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 15 @Seattle
W 78- 61 0-0 1-0 1-0
Aug 17 SEATTLE
W 69- 59 1-0 1-0 2-0

High Scoring
Leslie-24
Leslie-23

High Rebounds
Leslie-9
Milton-Jones-10

Aug 22 @Utah
Aug 24 UTAH

W 75- 67 1-0 2-0 3-0


W103- 77 2-0 2-0 4-0

Milton-Jones-17
Leslie-25

Aug 29 @New York


Aug 31 NEW YORK

W 71- 63 2-0 3-0 5-0


W 69- 66 3-0 3-0 6-0

Opponent Scoring Atten.


Bolton-15
8,569
Swoopes-17
10,099

Leslie-4
Mabika-5
Mabika-7

Cooper-22
Cooper-23
Swoopes-23

14,883
12,673

High Assists
Dixon-5
Dixon-7

Opponent Scoring
Reed-17
Gillom-16
Harrison-16
Swoopes-22

Atten.
6,167
9,811

Cooper-29

13,884

Figgs-4
Milton-Jones-4
Figgs-5
Leslie-5

14,597

High Assists
Figgs-4
Figgs-9
Dixon-6
Figgs-6
Figgs-6
Figgs-10
Milton-Jones-5

Opponent Scoring
Lassiter-17
Arcain-18
Griffith-18

Atten.
9,756
8,730
8,502

Griffith-24
Holland-Corn-12
Stinson-18

11,972
7,174
16,132

Dixon-7

Sutton-Brown-12

13,141

Mabika-20
Leslie-17

Byears-11
Byears-11

Teasley-11
Teasley-11

Opponent Scoring
Jackson-19
Bird-17
Vodichkova-17
Williams-14
Azzi-16
Goodson-16
Hammon-18
Johnson-17
Whitmore-17

Atten.
9,686
8,187

Leslie-8
Mabika-9

High Assists
Teasley-8
Mabika-4
Teasley-4
Milton-Jones-5
Teasley-9

*** 2003 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 28 @Minnesota L 72- 74 0-0 0-1 0-1

High Scoring
Leslie-24

High Assists
Dixon-5

Opponent Scoring
Smith-23

Atten.
3,622

Aug 30 MINNESOTA W 80- 69 1-0 0-1 1-1


Sep 1 MINNESOTA W 74- 64 2-0 0-1 2-1

Leslie-20
Leslie-22

Teasley-8
Teasley-8

Smith-18
Raymond-17

8,128
6,920

Sep 5

Leslie-25

Teasley-8

Griffith-17

13,986

Teasley-10
Teasley-10
Teasley-11
Teasley-6

Smith-15
Walker-16
Cash-16
Holland-Corn-16

7,982
6,955
10,264
17,846

Teasley-7

Riley-27

22,076

CHARLOTTE

W 82- 54 3-1 3-0 6-1

3-2
4-2
5-2
5-3

Mabika-24
Leslie-26
Leslie-23
Leslie-18

High Rebounds
Leslie-7
Milton-Jones-7
Milton-Jones-10
Leslie-7
Mabika-7
Leslie-7
Milton-Jones-7
Teasley-8
Leslie-7
Leslie-12
Leslie-15

0-4 5-4

Mabika-29

Leslie-11

@Sacramento L 69- 77 2-0 0-2 2-2

Sep 7 SACRAMENTO
Sep 8 SACRAMENTO
Sep 12 DETROIT
Sep 14 @Detroit
Sep 16

Home Road Total


0-0 1-0 1-0
1-0 1-0 2-0
1-0 2-0 3-0

High Assists
Grubin-9
Grubin-7

@Detroit

W 79- 54 3-0
W 66- 63 4-0
W 75- 63 5-0
L 61- 62 5-0
Milton-Jones-18
L 78- 83 5-0

0-2
0-2
0-2
0-3

14,823
10,139
17,666
13,493

PLAYOFFS
*** 2004 POSTSEASON
Date
Opponent
Sep 24 @Sacramento
Sep 26 SACRAMENTO
Sep 28 SACRAMENTO

Team/Opp
L 52- 72
W 71- 57
L 58- 73

Home Road Total


0-0 0-1 0-1
1-0 0-1 1-1
1-1 0-1 1-2

High Scoring
Mabika-15
Mabika-22
Mabika-19

High Rebounds
Thomas-9
Dixon-9
Leslie-12

High Assists
Teasley-6
Dixon-5
Teasley-6

Opponent Scoring
Smith-21
Smith-15
Lawson-17
Walker-17
Smith-17

Atten.
8,426
7,471
7,008

*** 2005 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 31 SACRAMENTO L 72- 75 0-1 0-0 0-1

High Scoring
Holdsclaw-24

High Rebounds
Leslie-5

High Assists
Teasley-9

Atten.
6,760

Sep 2

Whitmore-15

Leslie-8

Teasley-5

Opponent Scoring
Griffith-18
Powell-18
Griffith-13
Penicheiro-13

*** 2006 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 18 @Seattle
L 72- 84 0-0 0-1 0-1

High Scoring
Leslie-15

High Rebounds
Holdsclaw-9

Opponent Scoring
Jackson-22

Atten.
9,481

Aug 20 SEATTLE

W 78- 70 1-0 0-1 1-1

Leslie-17

Lennox-19

6,304

Aug 22 SEATTLE

W 68- 63 2-0 0-1 2-1

Johnson-14
Leslie-14
Mabika-23
T. Moore-16

Mabika-7
Mabika-17
Leslie-8

High Assists
Johnson-4
Leslie-4
T. Moore-6
Johnson-6

Jackson-19

8,259

Leslie-11
Leslie-4

Johnson-5
Johnson-4

Griffith-18
Griffith-15

9,285
1

High Rebounds
Leslie-11

High Assists
Parker-7

Opponent Scoring
Bird-23

Atten.
9,601

Leslie-11

Ferdinand-Harris-3
Johnson-3
Parker-4
ohnson-8
Bobbitt-4
Parker-5

Bird-20

8,230

Wright-20
Wauters-18
Young-21
Hammon-35

7,805
7,102
7,715
7,111

High Assists
Harrower-5

Opponent Scoring
Cash-24

Atten.
7,919

Quinn-5
Quinn-7
Thompson-5
Quinn-4
Lennox-3
Thompson-3

Cash-18
Cash-21
Taurasi-28
Taurasi-25
Taurasi-21

8,854
8,159
6,389
7,628
7,226

@Sacramento L 63- 81

Aug 24 @Sacramento L 61- 64


Aug 26 SACRAMENTO L 58- 72

0-1 0-1 0-2

2-0 0-2 2-2


2-1 0-2 2-3

*** 2008 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Sep 19 SEATTLE
W 77- 69 1-0 0-0 1-0

Sep 21

@Seattle

L 50- 64 1-0 0-1 1-1

Sep 23
Sep 25
Sep 27
Sep 28

@Seattle
W 71- 64
SAN ANTONIO W 85- 70
@San Antonio L 66- 67
@San Antonio L 72- 76

1-0
2-0
2-0
2-0

1-1
1-1
1-2
1-3

2-1
3-1
3-2
3-3

High Scoring
Ferdinand-Harris-11
Milton-Jones-11
Parker-11
Leslie-11
Milton-Jones-11
Parker-20
Leslie-22
Parker-19
Milton-Jones-16
Parker-16

*** 2009 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Sep 16 SEATTLE
W 70- 63 1-0 0-0 1-0

High Scoring
Thompson-16

Sep 18
Sep 20
Sep 23
Sep 25
Sep 26

Lennox-17
Parker-22
Parker-28
Parker-24
Leslie-22

@Seattle
@Seattle
PHOENIX
@Phoenix
@Phoenix

L 74- 75
W 75- 64
L 94-103
W 87- 76
L 74- 85

1-0
1-0
1-1
1-1
1-1

0-1
1-1
1-1
2-1
2-2

1-1
2-1
2-2
3-2
3-3

Milton-Jones-8
Parker-12 J
Parker-17
Milton-Jones-10

High Rebounds
Leslie-10
Parker-10
Leslie-14
Milton-Jones-9
Parker-10
Parker-18
Thompson-11

10,193

*** 2010 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total
Aug 25 @Seattle
L 66- 79 0-0 0-1 0-1
Aug 28 SEATTLE
L 66- 81 0-1 0-1 0-2

High Scoring
High Rebounds
Ferdinand-Harris-18 Milton-Jones-8
Thompson-18
Milton-Jones-9

High Assists
Toliver-5
Thompson-5

Opponent Scoring
Cash-20
Jackson-24

Atten.
10,589
8,326

*** 2012 POSTSEASON


Date
Opponent
Sep 27 SAN ANTONIO
Sep 29 @San Antonio
Oct 4 @Minnesota
Oct 7 MINNESOTA

High Scoring
Toliver-29
Parker-32
Parker-25
Parker-33

High Assists
Beard-3
Parker-6
Parker-4
Beard-7

Opponent Scoring
Hammon-19
Young-28
Moore-20
Augustus-21

Atten.
5,013
5,293
8,513
10,791

Team/Opp
W 93- 86
W 101-94
L 77-94
L 79-80

Home Road Total


1-0 0-0 1-0
1-0 1-0 2-0
1-0 1-1 2-1
1-1 1-1 2-2

High Rebounds
Parker-9
Parker-9
Parker-11
Parker-15

TEAM RECORDS

TEAM RECORDS
TEAM OFFENSE
SCORING
Highest average, points per game, season
84.0~2012 (2587/34)
77.9~2010 (2648/34)
Lowest average, points per game, season
68.4~2005 (2326/34)
71.6~1998 (2148/30)
Most points, game
105~vs. San Antonio, June 25, 2006
102~vs. Utah, June 28, 1999
~vs. Utah, July 7, 2002
Fewest points, game
47~vs. Seattle, July 10, 2007
51~at Sacramento, June 3, 2004
~at Connecticut, August 9, 2005
~at Houston, August 27, 2005
Largest margin of victory, game
32~vs. Utah, June 28, 1999 (102-70)
31~vs. Indiana, July 19, 2004 (82-51)
~vs. Washington, June 18, 2012 (101-70)
Largest margin of defeat, game
43~at Minnesota, May 31, 2006 (71-114)
36~at Seattle, August 6, 2003 (56-92)
BY HALF
Most points, first half
59~vs. San Antonio, August 23, 2012
55~vs. Utah, August 4, 2002
~at Connecticut, May 24, 2003
Fewest points, first half
16~at San Antonio, August 9, 2003
~at Houston, August 27, 2005
~at Detroit, June 8, 2009
17~at Washington, August 14, 1999
Largest lead at halftime
26~vs. Minnesota, August 21, 2003 (50-24)
~vs. Sacramento, June 11, 2005 (47-21)
25~vs. Phoenix, July 21, 1999 (50-25)
Largest deficit at halftime overcome to win game
17~at San Antonio, June 26, 2003 (trailed 24-41; won 67-58)
13~at Minnesota, July 1, 1999 (trailed 28-41; won 81-77 in
2 OT)
~at Sacramento, June 14, 2008 (trailed 31-44; won 74-66)
~at Tulsa, August 21, 2011 (trailed 32-45; won 73-67)
Most points, second half
59~vs. Minnesota, August 20, 2010
57~vs. Washington, June 18, 2012
Fewest points, second half
18~at Sacramento, June 3, 2004
19~vs. Houston, August 1, 1997

OVERTIME
Most points, overtime period
19~vs. Minnesota, July 8, 2001
15~at Detroit, June 26, 2001
~at Sacramento, June 15, 2002
~at Washington, August 23, 2011
Fewest points, overtime period
0~vs. Washington, June 26, 2008
2~at Detroit, June 17, 2003
~at San Antonio, June 24, 2011
~at San Antonio, June 16, 2012
Largest margin of victory, overtime period
9~at Detroit, June 26, 2001 (98-89)
8~at Seattle, August 8, 2000 (60-52)
~vs. Sacramento, June 22, 2007 (96-88)
~vs. Houston, July 9, 2008 (82-74)
~at Minnesota, July 27, 2008 (92-84)
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Highest field-goal percentage, season
.458~2012 (1059/2312)
.451~2001 (916/2031)
Lowest field-goal percentage, season
.408~2007 (940/2305)
.416~1998 (797/1914)
Highest field-goal percentage, game
.655~vs. Houston, June 15, 2005 (36/55)
.623~vs. Minnesota, June 8, 2007 (38/61)
Lowest field-goal percentage, game
.257~vs. Houston, August 8, 2002 (19/74)
.266~at Detroit, June 8, 2009 (17/64)
FIELD GOALS
Most field goals per game, season
31.2~2012 (1059/34)
28.63~2001 (916/32)
Fewest field goals per game, season
25.7~2005 (873/34)
26.3~2003 (894/34)
Most field goals, game
42~vs. San Antonio, June 25, 2006
39~at Detroit, June 26, 2001 (ot)
~vs. Phoenix, June 13, 2006
Fewest field goals, game
16~at Seattle, July 11, 2002
~at San Antonio, August 9, 2003
17~at Houston, August 12, 1999
~at Detroit, June 8, 2009
FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS
Most field-goal attempts per game, season
68.0~2012 (2312/34)
67.8~2007 (2305/34)

TEAM RECORDS
Fewest field-goal attempts per game, season
60.1~2005 (2042/34)
60.9~2004 (2069/34)
Most field-goal attempts, game
93~vs. Sacramento, June 22, 2007 (2 ot)
88~vs. Phoenix, August 7, 2007

FREE THROW PERCENTAGE


Highest free-throw percentage, season
.822~2010 (503/612)
.794~2011 (440/554)
Lowest free-throw percentage, season
.676~1997 (419/620)
.724~2005 (456/630)

Fewest field-goal attempts, game


45~at Sacramento, June 30, 1998
48~at Miami, June 23, 2000
~at Phoenix, June 18, 2004

Highest free-throw percentage, game


1.000~Many times. Most recent:
~at Chicago, September 2, 2012 (13/13)

THREE-POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE


Highest three-point field-goal percentage, season
.396~2011 (237/598)
.379~2004 (157/414)

Lowest free-throw percentage, game


.375~at Houston, June 21, 2001 (3/8)
~vs. Chicago, June 9, 2006 (3/8)
.400~vs. Cleveland, July 5, 1999 (4/10)

Lowest three-point field-goal percentage, season


.269~1997 (65/242)
.294~2006 (111/377)

FREE THROWS MADE


Most free throws made per game, season
17.0~2000 (545/32)
16.0~2012 (545/34)

THREE POINT FIELD GOALS


Most three-point field goals per game, season
7.0~2011 (237/34)
6.1~2002 (194/32)

Fewest free throws made per game, season


12.9~2011 (440/34)
12.8~2009 (435/34)

Fewest three-point field goals per game, season


2.3~1997 (65/28)
3.3~2006 (111/34)

Most free throws made, game


40~vs. Washington, August 3, 1998
33~vs. Houston, June 20, 2000

Most three-point field goals, game


15~at Connecticut, July 24, 2010
13~vs. Phoenix, June 10, 2011

Fewest free throws made, game


3~at Houston, June 21, 2001
~vs. Seattle, August 1, 2002
~vs. Chicago, June 9, 2006
4~vs. Cleveland, July 5, 1999
~at Utah, August 13, 2001 (ot)
~vs. Seattle, July 10, 2007

Fewest three-point field goals, game


0~vs. Utah, July 11, 1997
~vs. Houston, August 1, 1997
~at New York, August 5, 1997
~vs. Sacramento, August 22, 1997
~vs. Phoenix, July 11, 1999
~vs. Phoenix, July 15, 2003 (2 ot)
~at Minnesota, July 16, 2006
~vs. Sacramento, June 27, 2007
THREE POINT FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS
Most three-point field goal attempts per game, season
17.59- 2011 (598/34)
17.56- 2010 (597/34)
Fewest three-point field goal attempts per game, season
8.6~1997 (242/28)
11.1~2006 (377/34)
Most three-point field goal attempts, game
30~at San Antonio, June 16, 2012 (ot)
29~at Connecticut, July 24, 2010
Fewest three-point field goal attempts, game
1~at New York, August 5, 1997
2~vs. Sacramento, August 22, 1997

FREE THROW ATTEMPTS


Most free throw attempts per game, season
22.1~1997 (620/28)
21.7~2000 (693/32)
Fewest free throw attempts per game, season
16.2~2009 (550/34)
16.3~2011 (554/34)
Most free throw attempts, game
51~vs. Washington, August 3, 1998
42~vs. Houston, June 20, 2000
~vs. Utah, August 4, 2002
Fewest free throw attempts, game
5~at Houston, August 19, 1998
~vs. Seattle, July 10, 2007
6~at Sacramento, August 1, 2009
~vs. San Antonio, September 6, 2011
REBOUNDS
Most rebounds per game, season
37.7~2008 (1282/34)
36.9~2012 (1254/34)

TEAM RECORDS
Fewest rebounds per game, season
29.5~2005 (1004/34)
30.8~2010 (1048/34)
Most rebounds, game
55~at Phoenix, July 10, 2012
52~at Chicago, May 22, 2007

Most assists, game


29~vs. Indiana, August 6, 2001
28~vs. New York, July 20, 2000
~vs. Phoenix, August 27, 2009

Fewest rebounds, game


17~at Utah, August 21, 1999
19~at Detroit, August 2, 2000

Fewest assists, game


6~at New York, August 5, 1997
~at San Antonio, August 9, 2003
7~at Detroit, July 25, 1998
~at Seattle, August 6, 2003
~at Sacramento, June 4, 2005

OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS
Most offensive rebounds per game, season
11.4~2008 (386/34)
11.2~2012 (382/34)

Personal Fouls
Most personal fouls per game, season
22.5~1998 (675/30)
22.0~2000 (705/32)

Fewest offensive rebounds per game, season


7.7~2010 (260/34)
8.6~2011 (293/34)

Fewest personal fouls per game, season


16.8~2010 (571/34)
16.9~2011 (575/34)

Most offensive rebounds, game


23~at Indiana, July 12, 2012
22~at Phoenix, June 19, 2009
~at Phoenix, July 10, 2012

Most personal fouls, game


36~at Utah, June 23, 1997
35~at Portland, June 17, 2000

Fewest offensive rebounds, game


1~at Indiana, July 22, 2006
2~at Tulsa, August 21, 2011
DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS
Most defensive rebounds per game, season
26.4~2008 (896/34)
26.0~2009 (883/34)
Fewest defensive rebounds per game, season
20.1~2005 (683/34)
22.7~1999 (725/32)
Most defensive rebounds, game
38~at Sacramento, July 27, 1997
37~vs. Portland, July 24, 2002
~at Indiana, May 29, 2008 (2 ot)
~at Minnesota, July 27, 2010
~at San Antonio, June 24, 2011 (ot)
Fewest defensive rebounds, game
12~at Utah, August 21, 1999
~at Sacramento, July 29, 2005
~at Washington, August 1, 2006
13~at Sacramento, July 15, 1997
~at Detroit, August 2, 2000
~at Seattle, July 31, 2005
ASSISTS
Most assists per game, season
18.6~2001 (596/32)
18.4~2004, 2010 (626/34)
Fewest assists per game, season
15.7~1998 (472/30)
16.2~2005 (551/34)

Fewest personal fouls, game


9~vs. Chicago, June 9, 2006
~vs. San Antonio, September 6, 2011
10~vs. Indiana, August 6, 2001
~vs. Minnesota, August 20, 2010
~vs. New York, August 25, 2012
DISQUALIFICATIONS
Most disqualifications per game, season
0.56~2002 (18/32)
0.41~2000 (13/32)
Fewest disqualifications per game, season
0.06~2011 (2/34)
0.12~2008, 2009, 2010 (4/34)
Most disqualifications, game
3~at Seattle, June 13, 2000 (ot)
~at New York, June 3, 2006 (ot)
~at San Antonio, June 16, 2012
2~Many times
STEALS
Most steals per game, season
9.3~1997 (259/28)
8.9~2012 (303/34)
Fewest steals per game, season
6.4~2009 (217/34)
7.1~2003 (242/34)
Most steals, game
20~at Cleveland, July 3, 1997
17~at Portland, August 14, 2001
~vs. New York, June 29, 2004 (ot)
~at San Antonio, July 31, 2004

TEAM RECORDS
Fewest steals, game
1~vs. New York, June 19, 1998
2~many times
BLOCKED SHOTS
Most blocked shots per game, season
6.4~2008 (216/34)
5.3~2012 (179/34)
Fewest blocked shots per game, season
3.2~2007 (107/34)
3.4~2011 (115/34)
Most blocked shots, game
15~vs. Sacramento, August 28, 2008
13~at Phoenix, July 11, 2001
Fewest blocked shots, game
0~vs. Houston, July 18, 1999
~vs. New York, July 24, 1999 (ot)
~vs. Portland, June 17, 2001
~at Washington, May 25, 2004
~at New York, August 10, 2005
~at Houston, August 27, 2005
~at Houston, June 20, 2007
~at Connecticut, July 24, 2008
~at Minnesota, June 5, 2011
1~Many times

Fewest points allowed, game


47~vs. Sacramento, June 21, 2009
48~at Phoenix, June 21, 2003
~vs. Seattle, September 14, 2008
Fewest points allowed, first half
16~at Washington, August 14, 1999
18~vs. Houston, July 16, 1997
~vs. Seattle, September 14, 2008
Fewest points allowed, second half
17~at San Antonio, June 26, 2003
19~at Minnesota, August 6, 1999
~at Phoenix, June 21, 2003
Fewest points allowed, overtime period
0~at Minnesota, July 27, 2008
2~at Seattle, August 8, 2000
~at Sacramento, July 29, 2004
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Lowest opponents field-goal percentage, season
.384~2008 (888/2310)
.389~2004 (815/2095)
Highest opponents field-goal percentage, season
.447~2011 (1042/2332)
.441~2010 (1025/2322)

TURNOVERS
Most turnovers per game, season
18.9~1997 (528/28)
17.9~2008 (608/34)

Lowest opponents field goal percentage, game


.237~at Seattle, May 21, 2005 (18/76)
.258~vs. Sacramento, June 21, 2009 (17/66)

Fewest turnovers per game, season


13.7~2001 (438/32)
13.8~2003 (470/34)

TURNOVERS
Most opponents turnovers per game, season
18.0~1997 (505/28)
16.4~2006 (556/34)

Most turnovers, game


28~at Sacramento, June 3, 2004
~vs. Tulsa, May 29, 2012
27~vs. Portland, July 24, 2002
~at Sacramento, July 10, 2008
~at Seattle, July 22, 2009 (3 ot)
Fewest turnovers, game
4~at Chicago, July 16, 2010
6~vs. New York, August 25, 2012
TEAM DEFENSE
POINTS
Fewest points allowed per game, season
67.7~2001 (2166/32)
67.8~2000 (2169/32)
Most points allowed per game, season
81.2~2010 (2761/34)
80.3~2011 (2731/34)

Fewest opponents turnovers per game, season


13.6~2009 (463/34)
13.7~2011 (464/34)
Most opponents turnovers, game
30~vs. Utah, June 28, 1999
28~at Cleveland, July 3, 1997
TEAM MISCELLANEOUS
GAME WON AND LOST
Highest winning percentage, season
.875~2000 (28-4)
~2001 (28-4)
.781~2002 (25-7)
Lowest winning percentage, season
.294~2007 (10-24)
.382~2010 (13-21)
Most consecutive games won
18~June 26-August 11, 2001
12~June 17-July 9, 2000
~July 14-August 8, 2000
~August 9, 2002-June 14, 2003

TEAM RECORDS
Most consecutive games won, one season
18~June 26-August 11, 2001
12~June 17-July 9, 2000
~July 14-August 8, 2000
Most consecutive game lost
7~June 29-July 17, 2007
5~June 21-July 2, 1998
~August 3-11, 2007
~June 24-July 9, 2011
Most consecutive game lost, one season
7~June 29-July 17, 2007
5~June 21-July 2, 1998
~August 3-11, 2007
~June 24-July 9, 2011
Highest winning percentage, home games, season
1.000~2001 (16-0)
.941~2012 (16-1)
Lowest winning percentage, home games, season
.294~2007 (5-12)
.471~2010 (8-9)
Most consecutive home games won
28~July 14, 2000-June 27, 2002
12~August 16, 1999-July 9, 2000
Most consecutive home games lost
8~June 29-August 9, 2007
4~July 17-August 7, 2011
Highest winning percentage, road games, season
.813~2000 (13-3)
~2002 (13-3)
.765~2003 (13-4)
Lowest winning percentage, road games, season
.267~1998 (4-11)
.294~2007, 2010, 2011 (5-12)
Most consecutive road games won
12~June 17-August 8, 2000
11~July 20, 2002-June 14, 2003
Most consecutive road games lost
7~June 14-July 27, 1998
~May 15-June 27, 2010
~August 21, 2010-July 9, 2011
5~June 20-July 19, 2008
~June 8-26, 2009
OVERTIME GAMES
Most overtime games, season
7~2008
5~2004
Most consecutive overtime games, season
2~June 29-July 2, 2004

Most overtime games won, season


4~2004, 2008
2~Many times
Most overtime games won, no losses, season
2~1999
1~1998, 2010
Most consecutive overtime games won
3~July 15, 1998-July 24, 1999
~August 8, 2000-July 8, 2001
~June 15, 2002-May 30, 2003
~June 29-July 29, 2004
~August 6, 2009-July 20, 2010
Most overtime games lost, season
3~2008
2~1997, 2007, 2011
Most overtime games lost, no wins, season
1~2006
Most consecutive overtime games lost
3~July 1, 2007-May 29, 2008
2~August 13, 2001-June 1, 2002
~June 24-July 17, 2011
Most overtime periods, game
3~at Seattle, July 22, 2009
2~Many times

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
LOS ANGELES SPARKS //
REGULAR SEASON INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
SEASONS
MOST SEASONS
12~Lisa Leslie
11~Mwadi Mabika
~DeLisha Milton-Jones
9 ~Tamecka Dixon
GAMES
Most game, career
363~Lisa Leslie
344~ DeLisha Milton-Jones
319~ Mwadi Mabika
Most consecutive games, career
154~DeLisha Milton-Jones, June 10, 1999-August 2, 2003
132~DeLisha Milton-Jones, June 19, 2009-September 20, 2012
119~Nikki Teasley, May 25, 2002-July 19, 2005
Most games, season
34~By many
MINUTES
Most minutes, career
11,634~Lisa Leslie
10,385~DeLisha Milton-Jones
8,604~Mwadi Mabika
Highest average, minutes per game, career
(Minimum 100 games)
32.4~Candace Parker (3828/118)
32.0~Lisa Leslie (11634/363)
31.3~Nikki Teasley (3727/119)
Most minutes, season
1,189~Nikki Teasley, 2003
1,183~Chamique Holdsclaw, 2005
1,182~Tina Thompson, 2009
Highest average, minutes per game, season
35.8~Chamique Holdsclaw, 2005 (1183/33)
35.03- DeLisha Milton-Jones, 2003 (1086/31)
34.97- Nikki Teasley, 2003 (1189/34)
Most minutes, game
52~Tina Thompson, at Seattle, July 22, 2009 (3 ot)
50~Nikki Teasley, vs. Phoenix, July 15, 2003 (2 ot)
48~Lisa Leslie, at Sacramento, July 29, 2004 (2 ot)
~Candace Parker, at Seattle, July 22, 2009 (3 ot)
SCORING
Most points, lifetime
6,263~Lisa Leslie
4,018~DeLisha Milton-Jones
3,480~Mwadi Mabika
Highest average, points per game, career
(Minimum 100 games)
17.3~Lisa Leslie (6263/363)
17.2~Candace Parker 2031/118)
13.1~Tina Thompson (1327/101)

Most points, season


680~Lisa Leslie, 2006
610~Candace Parker, 2008
606~Lisa Leslie, 2001
Highest average, points per game, season
20.0~Lisa Leslie, 2006 (680/34)
19.6~Lisa Leslie, 1998 (549/28)
19.5~Lisa Leslie, 2001 (606/31)
Most points, game
41~Lisa Leslie, vs. San Antonio, June 25, 2006
40~Candace Parker, vs. Houston, July 9, 2008 (ot)
38~DeLisha Milton-Jones, at Phoenix, July 17, 2008
Most games, 30 or more points, career
14~Lisa Leslie
8~Candace Parker
2~Tina Thompson
Most games, 20 or more points, career
126~Lisa Leslie
40~Candace Parker
39~Mwadi Mabika
Most consecutive games, 20 or more points
6~Lisa Leslie, July 28-August 8, 2001
~Lisa Leslie, September 1-14, 2004
5~Candace Parker, May 28-June 8, 2010
~Kristi Toliver, August 18-30, 2012
4~Lisa Leslie, July 15-23, 2000
~Mwadi Mabika, July 15-22, 2003
~Tina Thompson, August 14-21, 2010
Most consecutive games, 10 or more points
54~Lisa Leslie, June 17, 2000-August 8, 2001
40~Lisa Leslie, August 16, 1997-June 24, 1999
32~Candace Parker, May 17-September 11, 2008
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Highest field goal percentage, career
(Minimum 400 field goals)
.500~Candace Parker (787/1575)
.470~Lisa Leslie (2332/4961)
.459~DeLisha Milton-Jones (1509/3290)
Highest field goal percentage, season (qualifiers)
.618~Haixia Zheng, 1997 (110/178)
.602~Latasha Byears, 2001 (133/221)
.535~Nneka Ogwumike, 2012 (178/333)
Highest field goal percentage, game
(Minimum 8 field goals made)
1.000~Lisa Leslie, at Seattle, July 31, 2005 (8/8)
.909~Haixia Zheng, vs. Sacramento, August 22, 1997 (10/11)
~Ebony Hoffman, at Minnesota, July 26, 2011 (10/11)
.900~Lisa Leslie, vs. Seattle, August 4, 2001 (9/10)
Most field goals, none missed, game
8~Lisa Leslie, at Seattle, July 31, 2005
7~Nneka Ogwumike, at Conneticut, June 13, 2012
6~Latasha Byears, at Phoenix, June 28, 2002
~Christi Thomas, vs. Washington, August 9, 2007
~Vanessa Hayden, vs. Detroit, June 6, 2009

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most field goal attempts, none made, game
12~Kristi Toliver, vs. San Antonio, July 18, 2011
8~Sherill Baker, vs. Minnesota, August 12, 2007
7~By many
FIELD GOALS
Most field goals, career
2,332~Lisa Leslie
1,509~DeLisha Milton-Jones
1,224~Mwadi Mabika
Most field goals, season
257~Lisa Leslie, 2006
231~Candace Parker, 2008
228~Candace Parker, 2012
Most field goals, game
16~Lisa Leslie, vs. San Antonio, June 25, 2006
15~Candace Parker, vs. Houston, July 9, 2008 (ot)
14~Lisa Leslie, vs. Seattle, August 1, 2002
~Tina Thompson, vs. Phoenix, August 17, 2010
~Lisa Leslie, at Seattle, July 30, 2006
~Candace Parker vs. Tulsa, June 20, 2012
FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS
Most field goal attempts, career
4,961~Lisa Leslie
3,290~DeLisha Milton-Jones
3,159~Mwadi Mabika

Most three-point field goal attempts, none made, game


7~Kristi Toliver, vs. Connecticut, August 3, 2011
6~Lisa Leslie, at Utah, August 13, 2001 (ot)
~Sidney Spencer, at Sacramento, July 24, 2007
~Tina Thompson, at Washington, July 11, 2009
~Tina Thompson, vs. San Antonio, August 4, 2009
5~By many
THREE POINT FIELD GOALS
Most three-point field goals, career
398~Mwadi Mabika
207~Nikki Teasley
202~DeLisha Milton-Jones
Most three-point field goals, season
70~Nikki Teasley, 2003
68~Nikki Teasley, 2004
64~Mwadi Mabika, 2002
~Kristi Toliver, 2012
Most three-point field goals, game
7~Mwadi Mabika, vs. Sacramento, June 18, 2006
6~Nikki Teasley, vs. Detroit, September 9, 2004
~Sidney Spencer, at Phoenix, July 20, 2007
~Kristi Toliver, at Phoenix, September 3, 2011
~Kristi Toliver, vs. Minnesota, July 5, 2012
~Kristi Toliver, vs. San Antonio, August 23, 2012
5~By many

Most field goal attempts, season


503~Lisa Leslie, 2006
474~Candace Parker, 2012
467~Lisa Leslie, 2001

Most consecutive games, three-point field goals made


33~Nikki Teasley, June 5, 2004-May 31, 2005
16~Mwadi Mabika, June 11-July 14, 2000
~Mwadi Mabika, June 8-July 20, 2002
15~Mwadi Mabika, July 20, 2000-June 5, 2001
~Ukari Figgs, July 8-August 13, 2001

Most field goal attempts, game


28~Mwadi Mabika, vs. Phoenix, July 15, 2003 (2 ot)
~Mwadi Mabika, at Sacramento, July 29, 2004 (2 ot)
25~Candace Parker, at Phoenix, September 3, 2011
24~Lisa Leslie, vs. San Antonio, August 23, 2003
~Lisa Leslie, at Seattle, July 30, 2006
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Minnesota, August 13, 2006
~Tina Thompson, at Minnesota, July 28, 2009

THREE POINT FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS


Most three-point field goal attempts, career
1,209~Mwadi Mabika
597~DeLisha Milton-Jones
524~Nikki Teasley

THREE POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE


Highest three-point field goal percentage, career
(Minimum 100 three-point field goals)
.405~Kristi Toliver (157/388)
.395~Nikki Teasley (207/524)
.353~Tina Thompson (152/430)
Highest three-point field goal percentage, season (qualifiers)
.462~Ukari Figgs, 2001 (54/117)
.449~Doneeka Hodges, 2005 (31/69)
.444~Jenna OHea, 2011 (28/63)
Most three-point field goals, none missed, game
6~Kristi Toliver, vs. Minnesota, July 5, 2012
5~Nikki Teasley, at Houston, June 24, 2003
4~Nina Bjedov, at Utah, August 5, 1999
~Lisa Leslie, at Seattle, June 16, 2001

Most three-point field goal attempts, season


175~Mwadi Mabika, 2002
165~Nikki Teasley, 2003
~Nikki Teasley, 2004
162~Tina Thompson, 2010
Most three-point field goal attempts, game
11~Mwadi Mabika, at Minnesota, July 1, 1999 (2 ot)
~Sophia Witherspoon, vs. Orlando, July 22, 2002
~Mwadi Mabika, vs. Miami, July 30, 2002
~Mwadi Mabika, vs. Houston, August 8, 2002
10~By many
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
Highest free-throw percentage, career
(Minimum 200 FT)
.885~Kristi Toliver (230/260)
.861~Tina Thompson (235/273)
.822~Chamique Holdsclaw (217/264)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Highest free-throw percentage, season (qualifiers)
.901~Kristi Toliver, 2012 (137/152)
.894~Betty Lennox, 2009 (59/66)
.891~Marie Ferdinand-Harris, 2008 (82/92)

Highest average, rebounds per game, career (Min. 100 games)


9.5~Candace Parker (1124/118)
9.1~Lisa Leslie (3307/363)
5.6~Tina Thompson (561/101)

Most free throws made, none missed, game


14~Lisa Leslie, vs. Minnesota, July 15, 2000
~Kristi Toliver, vs. Tulsa, June 20, 2012
11~Mwadi Mabika, at Portland, June 17, 2000
10~Mwadi Mabika, at Portland, July 12, 2002 (ot)
~Mwadi Mabika, vs. Houston, July 18, 2003
~DeLisha Milton-Jones, vs. Phoenix, July 24, 2003
~Nikki Teasley, at Phoenix, August 8, 2003
~Tina Thompson, at Seattle, May 16, 2010

Most rebounds, season


336~Lisa Leslie, 2004
323~Lisa Leslie, 2006
322~Lisa Leslie, 2002

Most free throw attempts, none made, game


4~Sophia Witherspoon, at Miami, May 30, 2002
3~Vedra Grgin Fonseca, at New York, June 24, 2001
~Tamika Whitmore, at Houston, July 10, 2004
2~By many

Most rebounds, game


21~Lisa Leslie, vs. New York, June 19, 1998
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Orlando, July 22, 2002
20~Lisa Leslie, at Charlotte, June 20, 2004 (2 ot)
~Nneka Ogwumike, at Indiana, July 12, 2012
18~Lisa Leslie, at Cleveland, June 12, 1999
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Portland, June 3, 2002

FREE THROWS MADE


Most free throws made, career
1,477~Lisa Leslie
798~DeLisha Milton-Jones
634~Mwadi Mabika
Most free throws made, season
169~Lisa Leslie, 2000
158~Lisa Leslie, 2006
146~Lisa Leslie, 2004
Most free throws made, game
15~Lisa Leslie, vs. Utah, August 4, 2002
14~Lisa Leslie, vs. Minnesota, July 15, 2000
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Washington, July 21, 2004
~Kristi Toliver, vs. Tulsa, June 20, 2012
13~Lisa Leslie, vs. San Antonio, September 1, 2004
~Chamique Holdsclaw, at Washington, May 26, 2005

Highest average, rebounds per game, season (qualifiers)


10.4~Lisa Leslie, 2002 (322/31)
10.2~Lisa Leslie, 1998 (285/28)
10.0~Lisa Leslie, 2003 (231/23)

Most games, 10+ rebounds, career


162~Lisa Leslie
66~Candace Parker
22~DeLisha Milton-Jones
Most consecutive games, 10+ rebounds
12~Candace Parker, August 30-June 4, 2010
7~Lisa Leslie, August 22, 1997--June 21, 1998
~Lisa Leslie, August 13, 2002-June 7, 2003
6~Candace Parker, July 22-August 6, 2009
OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS
Most offensive rebounds, career
882~Lisa Leslie
597~DeLisha Milton-Jones
306~Mwadi Mabika

FREE THROW ATTEMPTS


Most free throw attempts, career
2,125~Lisa Leslie
1,010~DeLisha Milton-Jones
791~Mwadi Mabika

Highest average, offensive rebounds per game, career


(Minimum 100 games)
2.4~Lisa Leslie (882/363)
2.3~Candace Parker (267/118)
1.7~DeLisha Milton-Jones (597/344)

Most free throw attempts, season


243~Lisa Leslie, 2006
205~Lisa Leslie, 2000
~Lisa Leslie, 2004
193~Lisa Leslie, 2001

Most offensive rebounds, season


98~Nneka Ogwumike, 2012
88~Lisa Leslie, 2001
86~Chamique Holdsclaw, 2005

Most free throw attempts, game


19~Lisa Leslie, vs. Utah, August 4, 2002
18~Lisa Leslie, vs. Washington, July 21, 2004
17~ Candace Parker, vs. Minnesota, July 5, 2012

Most offensive rebounds, game


12~Nneka Ogwumike, at Indiana, July 12, 2012
10~Latasha Byears, vs. Sacramento, July 25, 2001
8~Lisa Leslie, at New York, June 24, 2001
~Chamique Holdsclaw, at Charlotte, May 28, 2005
~Candace Parker, at Phoenix, September 13, 2009
~Nneka Ogwumike, at Phoenix, July 10, 2012

REBOUNDS
Most rebounds, career
3,307~Lisa Leslie
1,882~DeLisha Milton-Jones
1,290~Mwadi Mabika

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS
Most defensive rebounds, career
2,425~Lisa Leslie
1,285~DeLisha Milton-Jones
984~Mwadi Mabika
Highest average, defensive rebounds per game, career
(Minimum 100 games)
7.3~Candace Parker (857/118)
6.7~Lisa Leslie (2425/363)
4.0~Tina Thompson (402/101)

PERSONAL FOULS
Most personal fouls, career
1,397~Lisa Leslie
1,125~DeLisha Milton-Jones
905~Mwadi Mabika

Most defensive rebounds, season


276~Lisa Leslie, 2004
244~Lisa Leslie, 2002
240~Lisa Leslie, 2006

Most personal fouls, game


6~by many

Most defensive rebounds, game


16~Lisa Leslie, vs. New York, June 19, 1998
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Orlando, July 22, 2002
15~Lisa Leslie, vs. Portland, June 3, 2002
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Minnesota, June 11, 2004
~Lisa Leslie, at Charlotte, June 20, 2004 (2 ot)
14~Lisa Leslie, at Minnesota, June 9, 2001
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Connecticut, June 14, 2004 (ot)
~Candace Parker, at Indiana, May 29, 2008 (2 ot)
ASSISTS
Most assists, career
874~Lisa Leslie
769~Tamecka Dixon
761~Mwadi Mabika
Highest average, assists per game, career
(Minimum 100 games)
5.3~Nikki Teasley (631/119)
3.03~Kristi Toliver
3.02~Candace Parker
Most assists, season
220~Ticha Penicheiro, 2010
214~Nikki Teasley, 2003
207~Nikki Teasley, 2004
Highest average, assists per game, season (qualifiers)
6.9~Ticha Penicheiro, 2010 (220/32)
6.3~Nikki Teasley, 2003 (214/34)
6.1~Nikki Teasley, 2004 (207/34)
Most assists, game
15~Ticha Penicheiro, vs. Chicago, August 4, 2010
14~Penny Toler, vs. Utah, August 14, 1998
13~Nikki Teasley, at New York, June 14, 2003
~Ticha Penicheiro, vs. Tulsa, July 20, 2010 (ot)
~Ticha Penicheiro, vs. Tulsa, August 6, 2010
Most games, 10+ assists, career
10~Ticha Penicheiro
8~Nikki Teasley
2~Shannon Bobbitt
~Penny Toler

Most personal fouls, season


136~Lisa Leslie, 1999
134~Lisa Leslie, 2000
132~Lisa Leslie, 2001

DISQUALIFICATIONS
Most disqualifications, career
42~Lisa Leslie
14~DeLisha Milton-Jones
8~Latasha Byears
~Mwadi Mabika
Highest percentage, games disqualified, career
(Minimum 100 games)
11.6~Lisa Leslie (42/363)
4.1~DeLisha Milton-Jones (14/344)
4.0~Kristi Toliver (4/100)
Lowest percentage, games disqualified, career
(Minimum 100 games)
0.00~Nicky McCrimmon (0/125)
~Noelle Quinn (0/101)
0.8~Nikki Teasley (1/119)
1.9~Jessica Moore (2/106)
Most consecutive games without disqualification, career
125~Nicky McCrimmon, May 31, 2000-August 25, 2003
117~Mwadi Mabika, July 31, 2003-August 4, 2007
113~Nikki Teasley, June 11, 2002-July 19, 2005
Most disqualifications, season
7~Lisa Leslie, 2000
~Lisa Leslie, 2002
5~Lisa Leslie, 2004
4~By many
Fewest minutes, disqualified, game
11~Lisa Leslie, vs. New York, July 1, 2008
13~Jessica Moore, vs. Detroit, June 7, 2006
14~Latasha Byears, vs. Phoenix, June 25, 2002
~Lynn Pride, at Phoenix, August 8, 2003
STEALS
Most steals, career
492~Lisa Leslie
440~DeLisha Milton-Jones
360~Mwadi Mabika
Highest average, steals per game, career
(Minimum 100 games)
1.36~Lisa Leslie (492/363)
1.28~DeLisha Milton-Jones (440/344)
1.18~Candace Parker (139/118)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most steals, season
67~Lisa Leslie, 2005
66~Alana Beard, 2012
58~Mwadi Mabika, 2000

Highest average, blocked shots per game, season (qualifiers)


2.94~Lisa Leslie, 2008 (97/34)
2.90~Lisa Leslie, 2002 (90/31)
2.88~Lisa Leslie, 2004 (98/34)

Highest average, steals per game, season (qualifiers)


2.00~Alana Beard, 2012 (66/33)
1.97~Lisa Leslie, 2005 (67/34)
1.81- Tamecka Dixon, 1997 (49/27) 1

Most blocked shots, game


10~Lisa Leslie, vs. Detroit, September 9, 2004
9~Candace Parker, vs. Tulsa, June 20, 2012
8~Lisa Leslie, vs. Sacramento, August 28, 2008
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Minnesota, September 1, 2008

Most steals, game


6~Lisa Leslie, vs. Cleveland, July 12, 1998
~Lisa Leslie, at Utah, August 1, 1998
~Penny Toler, vs. Washington, August 3, 1998
~Mwadi Mabika, at Detroit, July 2, 1999
~Lisa Leslie, vs. Utah, July 30, 1999
~Latasha Byears, at Portland, July 28, 2001
~Lisa Leslie, at Indiana, June 25, 2004
~Alana Beard, vs. Phoenix, September 18, 2012
BLOCKED SHOTS
Most blocked shots, career
822~Lisa Leslie
253~Candace Parker
221~DeLisha Milton-Jones
Highest average, blocked shots per game, career
(Minimum: 100 games)
2.26~Lisa Leslie (822/363)
2.14~Candace Parker (253/118)
0.71~DeLisha Milton-Jones (221/310)
Most blocked shots, season
98~Lisa Leslie, 2004
97~Lisa Leslie, 2008
90~Lisa Leslie, 2002

TURNOVERS
Most turnovers, career
1,193~Lisa Leslie
832~DeLisha Milton-Jones
547~Tamecka Dixon
Most turnovers, season
126~Lisa Leslie, 2006
124~Kristi Toliver, 2012
119~Lisa Leslie, 2008
Most turnovers, game
14~Kristi Toliver, vs. Tulsa, May 29, 2012
9~Nikki Teasley, vs. Phoenix, July 15, 2003 (2 ot)
~Nikki Teasley, vs. Connecticut, June 14, 2004 (ot)
~Lisa Leslie, at Houston, July 25, 2006
~Lisa Leslie, at Chicago, June 3, 2008 (ot)
~DeLisha Milton-Jones, at Minnesota, June 10, 2009
~Betty Lennox, at Seattle, July 22, 2009 (3 ot)
8~By many

OPPONENTS
ATLANDA DREAM
225 PEACHTREE NE, SUITE 2400
ATLANTA, GA 30303
P: 877 977 7729
F: 678 510 7489
WWW.ATLANTADREAM.NET
TONYA ALLEYNE
SENIOR DIRECTOR, MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS
TONYA.ALLEYNE@ATLANTADREAM.NET
OFFICE:
678 510 7397
CELL:
404 693 5181
BRAD GUST
MANAGER, MEDIA RELATIONS
BRAD.GUST@ATLANTADREAM.NET
OFFICE:
678 510 7396
CELL:
404 915 3383
2013 MATCHUPS
7/17 vs. ATLANTA
9/2 vs. ATLANTA

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
0-1
OVERALL
1-1

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

1-4
2-3
3-7

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

6-1
4-3
10-4

CHICAGO SKY
20 W. KINZIE ST. SUITE 1000
CHICAGO, IL 60610
P: 312 828 9550
F: 312 828 9979
WWW.CHICAGOSKY.NET
STEPHANIE PERLEBERG
COORDINATOR, MEDIA RELATIONS
SPERLEBERG@CHICAGOSKY.NET
OFFICE:
312 994 5984
CELL:
414 418 0840
MICHELLE HENSTOCK
VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS
MHENSTOCK@CHICAGOSKY.NET
OFFICE:
312 994 5981
CELL:
606 776 1122
2013 MATCHUPS
6/29 @ CHICAGO
9/13 vs. CHICAGO

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
0-1
OVERALL
1-1

OPPONENTS
CONNECTICUT SUN
1 MOHEGAN SUN BOULEVARD
UNCASVILLE, CT 06382
P: 860 862 4000
F: 860 862 1420
WWW.CONNECTICUTSUN.COM
BILL TAVARES
BTAVARES@CONNECTICUTSUN.COM
MEDIA RELATIONS MANAGER
OFFICE:
860 862 4073
CELL:
860 961 0240
JEN HILDEBRAND
PUBLICIST
JHILDEBRAND@CONNECTICUTSUN.COM
OFFICE:
860 862 4087
CELL:
860 961 2245
2013 MATCHUPS
6/6 @ CONNECTICUT
9/27 vs. CONNECTICUT

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
1-0
OVERALL
2-0

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

9-5
5-6
14-12

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

10-2
5-6
15-8

INDIANA FEVER
125 S. PENNSYLVANIA STREET
INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46204
P: 317 917 2954
F: 317 917 2599
WWW.FEVERBASKETBALL.COM
KEVIN MESSENGER
DIRECTOR, MEDIA RELATIONS
KMESSENGER@PACERS.COM
OFFICE:
317 917 2844
CELL:
317 370 3437
TIM EDWARDS
MEDIA RELATIONS ASSISTANT
TEDWARDS@PACERS.COM
OFFICE:
317 917 2853
CELL:
317 253 3446
2013 MATCHUPS
8/8 @ INDIANA
8/16 vs. INDIANA

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
1-0
OVERALL
2-0

OPPONENTS
MINNESOTA LYNX
TARGET CENTER
600 FIRST AVENUE NORTH
MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55403
P: 612 673 1600
F: 612 673 8367
WWW.LYNXBASKETBALL.COM
ALEX KING
PUBLIC RELATIONS MANAGER
KING@LYNXBASKETBALL.COM
OFFICE:
612 673 1632
CELL:
612 597 5405
AARON SEEHUSEN
SEEHUSEN@LYNXBASKETBALL.COM
OFFICE:
612 673 1602
CELL:
612 350 5550
2013 MATCHUPS
6/21 vs. MINNESOTA
6/28 @ MINNESOTA
7/2 @ MINNESOTA
9/4 vs. MINNESOTA

2012 RESULTS
HOME
2-0
AWAY
0-2
OVERALL
2-2

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

21-4
15-11
36-15

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

9-7
6-11
15-18

NEW YORK LIBERTY


PRUDENTIAL CENTER
NEWARK, NJ 07102
P: 973 757 6500
F: 212 465 6250
WWW.NYLIBERTY.COM
STACEY ESCUDERO
VP, BUSINESS PUBLIC AFFAIRS
STACEY.ESCUDERO@THEGARDEN.COM
OFFICE:
212 465 5902
CELL:
917 572 2534
HASIM PHILLIPS
MANAGER, COMMUNICATIONS
HASIM.PHILLIPS@MSG.COM
OFFICE:
212 465 5962
CELL:
732 470 9457
2013 MATCHUPS
7/4 vs. NEW YORK
8/10 @ NEW YORK

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
0-1
OVERALL
1-1

OPPONENTS
PHOENIX MERCURY
US AIRWAYS CENTER
201 E. JEFFERSON ST.
PHOENIX, AZ 85004
P: 602 514 8333
F: 602 514 8303
WWW.PHOENIXMERCURY.COM
BRET BUCHARD
BASKETBALL COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER
BBURCHARD@PHOENIXMERCURY.COM
OFFICE:
602 514 8305
CELL:
602 904 3751
REBECCA CLARK
PR/CR DIRECTOR
RCLARK@PHOENIXMERCURY.COM
OFFICE:
602 379 7560
CELL:
602 503 2851
2013 MATCHUPS
6/14 @ PHOENIX
7/14 @ PHOENIX
7/18 vs. PHOENIX
9/15 vs. PHOENIX

2012 RESULTS
HOME
2-0
AWAY
3-0
OVERALL
5-0

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

22-8
17-14
39-22

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

20-10
14-15
34-25

SAN ANTONIO SILVER STARS


ONE AT&T CENTER
SAN ANTONIO, TX 78219
P: 210 444 5000
F: 210 444 5003
WWW.SASILVERSTARS.COM
LINDSEY CAMPBELL
PUBLIC RELATIONS MANAGER
LCAMPBELL@ATTCENTER.COM
OFFICE: 210 444 5738
CELL: 210 998 9000

2013 MATCHUPS
6/1 @ SAN ANTONIO
6/15 vs. SAN ANTONIO
7/6 vs. SAN ANTONIO
8/31 @ SAN ANTONIO

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-1
AWAY
0-2
OVERALL
1-3

OPPONENTS
SEATTLE STORM
3421 THORNDYKE AVE. WEST
SEATTLE, WA 98119
P: 206 217 9622
F: 206 281 5817
WWW.STORMBASKETBALL.COM
KIMBERLY VEALE
PUBLIC RELATIONS MANAGER
KVEALE@STORMBASKETBALL.COM
OFFICE:
206 272 2706
CELL:
510 599 9674

2013 MATCHUPS
5/26 vs. SEATTLE
7/20 @ SEATTLE
7/25 vs. SEATTLE
8/20 @ SEATTLE

2012 RESULTS
HOME
3-0
AWAY
2-0
OVERALL
5-0

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

16-8
19-16
35-24

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

13-3
9-10
22-13

TULSA SHOCK
WILLIAMS CENTER TOWER ONE
ONE WEST THIRD STREET
SUITE 1100
TULSA, OK 74103
P: 918 894 4674
F: 918 894 4671
WWW.TULSASHOCK.NET
AIMEE COOPER
MEDIA AND CR MANAGER
ACOOPER@TULSASHOCK.NET
OFFICE:
918 949 9715
CELL:
918 527 0730
2013 MATCHUPS
6/8 vs. TULSA
7/11 @ TULSA
8/2 @ TULSA
8/25 vs. TULSA

2012 RESULTS
HOME
2-0
AWAY
0-2
OVERALL
2-2

OPPONENTS
WASHINGTON MYSTICS
601 F STREET NW
WASHINGTON DC, 20004
P: 202 527 7540
F: 202 527 7539
WWW.WNBA.COM/MYSTICS
KETSIA COLIMON
DIRECTOR
KCOLIMON@MONUMENTALSPORTS.COM
OFFICE:
202 527 7535
CELL:
571 235 6305

2013 MATCHUPS
6/23 vs. WASHINGTON
8/4 @ WASHINGTON

2012 RESULTS
HOME
1-0
AWAY
1-0
OVERALL
2-0

ALL TIME
HOME
AWAY
OVERALL

10-4
10-5
20-9

ALL-TIME ROSTER
Farhiya Abdi
Erin Alexander
Nicky Anosike
Marlies Askamp
Sherill Baker
Alana Beard
Nina Bjedov
Octavia Blue
Shannon Bobbitt
Alyssia Brewer
Kiesha Brown
Heidi Burge
Linda Burgess
Latasha Byears
Daedra Charles
Tiffany Clarke
Monique Coker
Marissa Coleman
Katrina Colleton
Edniesha Curry
Brandi Davis
Erika de Souza
Tamecka Dixon
Margo Dydek
Allison Feaster
Marie Ferdinand-Harris
Marta Fernandez
Ukari Figgs
Tyesha Fluker
LaKeshia Frett
Katryna Gaither
Travesa Gant
Kim Gessig
Briana Gilbreath
Jennifer Gillom
Kamela Gissendanner
Vedrana Grgin-Fonseca
Gordana Grubin
Zheng Haixia
Vicki Hall
Lindsey Harding
Kristi Harrower
Vanessa Hayden
Ebony Hoffman
Chamique Holdsclaw
Amber Jacobs
Chandra Johnson
Temeka Johnson
Natasha Lacy
Jantel Lavender
Betty Lennox
Lisa Leslie
Nicole Levandusky

2013-present
1998
2012-present
2002
2007
2012-present
1999
1998
2008-09
2013-present
2007-08
1997
1997
2001-03
1997
2013-present
2004
2012-present
1997-98
2005
2006
2002
1997-05
2008
1998-2000
2008-10
2007
1999-2001
2007
1999-00
2002
1997
1997
2013-present
2003
2008
2000-02
1999, 2005
1997-98
2002
2013-present
2009
2009
2011-present
2005-07
2008
2003
2006-08
2011
2011 -present
2009-10
1997-06, 08-09
2001

Doneeka Lewis
Mwadi Mabika
Laura Macchi
Clarisse Machanguana
Rhonda Mapp
Raffaella Masciadri
Adia Mathies
Nicky McCrimmon
Pamela McGee
Taj McWilliams-Franklin
DeLisha Milton-Jones
Chanel Mokango
Jessica Moore
Loree Moore
Tamara Moore
Jenny Mowe
Emmeline Ndongue
Marlous Nieuwveen
Nnemkadi Ogwumike
Jenna OHea
Murriel Page
Courtney Paris
Candace Parker
Ticha Penicheiro
Lynn Pride
LaToya Pringle
Noelle Quinn
Michelle Reed
Andrea Riley
Eugenia Rycraw
Paige Sauer
Sidney Spencer
Tiffany Stansbury
April Sykes
Nikki Teasley
Christi Thomas
LaToya Thomas
Tina Thompson
Iciss Tillis
Penny Toler
Kristi Toliver
Mfon Udoka
Alexandra Van Embricqs
Dalivorka Vilipic
Teresa Weatherspoon
Tamika Whitmore
Jamila Wideman
Shaquala Williams
Lisa Willis
Wendi Willits
Lindsay Wisdom-Hylton
Sophia Witherspoon
Sharnee Zoll

2004-06
1997-07
2004-05
1999-00
2001, 2003
2004-05, 2008
2013-present
2000-03
1998
2007
1999-04, 08-12
2010-2011
2005-08
2011
2006
2003
2006
2005
2012-present
2011-present
2006-08
2011
2008-present
2010-2011
2003
2011
2009-2011
1998
2010
1998
2000
2007-08
2006, 2010
2012-present
2002-05
2004-08
2007
2009-2011
2007
1997-99
2010-present
2004
1998
2006
2004
2004-05
1997-98
2003
2006-07
2001
2009-2011
2002-03
2012

HISTORY
League: Womens National Basketball Association
League Office: 645 Fifth Ave; New York, NY 10022; (212) 688-WNBA (9622)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanta Dream
Chicago Sky
Connecticut Sun
Indiana Fever
New York Liberty
Washington Mystics

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Los Angeles Sparks
Minnesota Lynx
Phoenix Mercury
San Antonio Silver Stars
Seattle Storm
Tulsa Shock

History: On April 24, 1996, womens basketball announced We Got Next as the NBA Board of Governors approved the concept of a
Womens National Basketball Association (WNBA) to begin play in June 1997.
Since that day in 1996, there have been many firsts for the WNBA:
Val Ackerman -- the first president of the WNBA
Sheryl Swoopes -- the first player signed to the WNBA
Cynthia Cooper -- the leagues first Most Valuable Player
Houston Comets -- the first WNBA Champions
Lisa Leslie -- the first WNBA player to dunk (7/30/02 vs. Miami)
Lauren Jackson the first international player to win MVP (2007)
Candace Parker the first rookie to earn the leagues MVP honor (2008)
Sylvia Fowles the first goaltending call (6/3/2008 vs. LA)
The inaugural WNBA season tipped off on June 21, 1997, with the New York Liberty taking on the Los Angeles Sparks at the Great
Western Forum in Inglewood, Calif. A crowd of 14,284 watched as Sparks guard Penny Toler scored the first basket in WNBA history.
The Liberty defeated the Sparks, 67-57.
A Growing Game: The influence of the WNBA can be seen in the explosive growth of organized womens basketball over the
past 14 seasons. An estimated 100 million women play basketball worldwide, and the league reflects this trend, featuring 20
international players from 13 countries and territories at the end of the 2010 season. Female AAU youth basketball participation
has increased 277 percent since 1991 (from 28,840 to 108,758 players). Female high school basketball participation has increased
17 percent since 1991 (from 387,802 to 456,967 players). And female NCAA basketball participation has increased 43 percent since
1991 (from 10,551 to 15,096 players).
Key Personnel:Laurel Richie President
Renee Brown Chief of Basketball Operations and Player Relations
Christine Godleski Chief Operating Officer
Jamin Dershowitz General Counsel
Dee Kantner Supervisor of Officials
Hilary Shaev Vice President, Marketing
Key Players: Top veterans: Seimone Augustus (Lynx), Alana Beard (Sparks), Sue Bird (Storm), Swin Cash (Sky), Tamika Catchings
(Fever), Katie Douglas (Fever), Candice Dupree (Mercury), Sylvia Fowles (Sky), Becky Hammon (Silver Stars), Lauren Jackson (Storm),
Crystal Langhorne (Mystics), Kara Lawson (Sun), Angel McCoughtry (Dream), Candace Parker (Sparks), Cappie Pondexter (Liberty),
Diana Taurasi (Mercury), Tina Thompson (Storm), Lindsay Whalen (Lynx), Sophia Young (Silver Stars).
Rising young stars: Tina Charles (Sun), Epiphanny Prince (Sky), Monica Wright (Lynx), Jayne Appel (Silver Stars), Leilani Mitchell
(Liberty), DeWanna Bonner (Mercury), Essence Carson (Liberty), Lindsey Harding (Sparks), Renee Montgomery (Sun), Maya Moore
(Lynx), Nneka Ogwumike (Sparks), Candice Wiggins (Lynx).

HISTORY
Key Stats:

Ball size: 28.5 (high school and NCAA womens)


3-point line: 206 1/4 (International)
Length of game: Four 10-minute quarters

All-Star Game: The Connecticut Sun and the Mohegan Sun Arena will host the Boost Mobile 2013 WNBA All-Star Game in
Uncasville, Conn. on Saturday, July 27, 2013. The game will be broadcasted on ABC at 3:30 pm ET.
Due to the Olympics, no All-Star Game was held in 2012. Thirty-eight current anf former WNBA players represented nine countries in
the 2012 London Olympics, including the Gold-medal winning U.S. Olympic team, comprised solely of 12 WNBA players.
The first WNBA All-Star Game was held in New York at Madison Square Garden in 1999. The Garden also hosted the event in 2003 and
in 2006. Washingtons Verizon Center (2002, 2007) is the other venue to host the game multiple times. Other All-Star Games were
played in Phoenix (2000), Orlando (2001) and at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. (2009). Due to the Olympics, no AllStar Game was held in 2004 and 2008, although Radio City Music Hall in New York City was the site of an exhibition game on August
5, 2004, as the U.S. National Team, comprised mainly of WNBA greats, faced a squad of WNBA All-Stars in WNBA vs. USA Basketball:
The Game at Radio City
Inspiring Coach: The Inspiring Coach Award is an annual honor introduced in 2007 to recognize coaches who have positively
influenced athletes across numerous levels and whose achievements leave an indelible mark on sports as a whole. The University
of Connecticuts Geno Auriemma earned the honor in 2010 for his profound impact on female athletes and his demonstrated
commitment, passion, and dedication to work, family, and community. Previous winners include Pat Summit, Kay Yow, and Jody
Conradt.
Inspiring Women: The Inspiring Woman Award is an annual honor that celebrates an individual who, on a daily basis,
demonstrates her ability to inspire others through her commitment, passion and dedication to work, family, and community. Past
honorees include the women of Team USA (2012), news anchor and author Katie Couric (2011), U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations Susan Rice (2010), Emmy-award winning journalist Cokie Roberts (2009), Good Morning Americas Robin Roberts (2008),
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (2007), and the WNBA All-Decade Team (2006).
Dawn Staley Award: The Dawn Staley Community Leadership Award was announced in 2006 and is now presented annually to
the player who best exemplifies the characteristics of a leader in the community and reflects Staleys contagious leadership, spirit,
charitable efforts and love for the game. Winners include Tina Charles (2012), Chamique Holdsclaw (2009), Tamika Raymond (2008),
and Tamika Catchings (2007). A member of the WNBAs All-Decade Team, Staley, who retired following the 2006 season, established
herself as one of the greatest ambassadors in womens basketball history, while also demonstrating outstanding leadership qualities
as a coach on the collegiate level and as a philanthropist and humanitarian.

WNBA CARES

Through WNBA Cares, the WNBA is deeply


committed to creating programs that improve
the quality of life for all people with a special
emphasis on programs that inspire youth and
promote education, health and wellness and youth
and family development.

WNBA Cares goal alignment focuses on Philanthropy, Service, Legacy and Inspiring Women. Since
WNBA Cares launched, the league, players and teams have:

PHILANTHROPHY: Donated more than $11 million to charity, with more than $3.5
million raised in the fight against breast cancer
SERVICE: More than 525,000 hours of hands-on service
LEGACY: More than 40 places where kids and families can live, learn or play
INSPIRATION: 27 current and former WNBA coaches and players have traveled to 27
countries across five continents as sport ambassadors inspiring youth and promoting health
and wellness through basketball.

WNBA CARES WEEK


To promote the tip off of the season, the league and teams will partner with community and marketing
partners to host community and fan engagement events that highlight our commitment to the
community. WNBA Cares Week will take place from May 17 23.
WNBA GREEN
The WNBA is committed to a long-term environmental plan through the implementation of sustainable
business practices and procedures that decrease the leagues carbon footprint and contribute to a clean,
healthy environment. The WNBA Green Game will take place during the June 25 game between the
Phoenix Mercury and San Antonio Silver Stars
BREAST HEALTH AWARENESS
The WNBA Breast Health Awareness program focuses on generating awareness and educating women
about breast cancer in addition to raising funds for the initiative. This season, WNBA Breast Health
Awareness Week will take place from August 18-August 24.
WNBA FIT
The NBA/WNBA FIT platform is the leagues comprehensive health and wellness program that
encourages physical activity and healthy living for children and families. Through programs such as
Dribble to Stop Diabetes, Jamba Juice FIT Clinics and Coke Live Positively, the NBA/WNBA informs,
engages and educates its fans in healthy living practices.

WNBA TIMELINE
April 24, 1996: Womens basketball
announces We Got Next as the NBA
Board of Governors approves the concept
of a WNBA.
August 7, 1996: Val Ackerman is
named first president of the WNBA.
October 23, 1996 : Houston Comets
forward Sheryl Swoopes becomes the
first player signed by the WNBA.
October 30, 1996: WNBA announces
eight teams to compete in the inaugural
season Charlotte, Cleveland, Houston,
Los Angeles, New York, Phoenix,
Sacramento and Utah.
January 22, 1997: The leagues first
16 players are allocated to teams, an
elite group comprised of Olympians and
collegiate stars.
April 19, 1997: WNBA and Spalding
introduce the leagues official orangeand-oatmeal game ball during WNBA
Pre-Draft Camp at Disneys Wide World
of Sports complex in Orlando.
April 28, 1997: Tina Thompson is the first
No. 1 draft pick, selected by the Houston
Comets in the inaugural WNBA Draft.
June 21, 1997: The New York Liberty
and the Los Angeles Sparks tip-off the
first WNBA game at the Great Western
Forum in Los Angeles. Sparks guard
Penny Toler scores the leagues first
basket at 19:01. New York wins 67-57.
June 23, 1997: Utah Starzz becomes first
team to pass the 100-point mark in a 10289 victory over the Los Angeles Sparks.
July 2, 1997: New York Liberty
center Rebecca Lobo wins her 100th
consecutive personal victory when the
Liberty defeat the Houston Comets
70-67. Winning streak comprises Lobos
35-0 senior season at the University of
Connecticut, 60-0 as member of U.S.
Olympic Team and 5-0 as a member of
the Liberty. The streak ends at 102.

August 30, 1997: The Houston Comets


become the first WNBA Champions,
employing the unstoppable Cynthia
Cooper and a suffocating defense for a
65-51 victory over the New York Liberty
at The Summit.

June 29, 1999: The Sacramento


Monarchs and the Minnesota Lynx
combine for a WNBA-record 21 threepointers (10 by Sacramento, 11 by
Minnesota) in the Monarchs 86-72
victory over the Lynx.

October 1, 1997: The WNBA


announces that franchises in Detroit
and Washington will join the fold as
expansion teams for the 1998 season.

July 14, 1999: Whitney Houston sings


the National Anthem in front of an
electrified crowd on hand at Madison
Square Garden to witness the Inaugural
WNBA All-Star Game. The West defeats
the East 79-61 and Lisa Leslie is named
MVP.

April 22, 1998: The league announces the


addition of expansion teams in Orlando and
Minnesota for the 1999 season, bringing
the total number of teams to 12.
June 19, 1998: Los Angeles Sparks
center Lisa Leslie sets a WNBA record by
pulling down 21 rebounds in the Sparks
victory over the New York Liberty.
June 21, 1998: Lisa Leslie notches her
seventh-straight double-double, setting
a WNBA record.
July 18, 1998: Houstons Cynthia
Cooper becomes the first player to reach
1,000 points during Comets 75-44 rout
of the Sacramento Monarchs.
July 29, 1998: Sacramento Monarchs
guard Ticha Penicheiro dishes out 16
assists in a 75-67 loss vs. the Cleveland
Rockers to set a WNBA record.
August 29, 1998: In Game 2 of the
WNBA Finals, the Houston Comets,
trailing the Phoenix Mercury 1-0 in the
best-of-three series, erases a 12-point
deficit in the final 7:24 to force overtime.
Houston wins the series and claims its
second of four titles.
April 29, 1999: The WNBA and WNBPA
reaches final accord as the leagues first
Collective Bargaining Agreement is signed.
June 7, 1999: WNBA announces the
addition of four expansion teams for the
2000 season Indiana, Miami, Portland
and Seattle. The WNBA family now
includes 16 teams.

July 27, 1999: Sheryl Swoopes records


the WNBAs first triple-double with 15
points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists in an
85-46 win over Detroit at the Compaq
Center.
September 4, 1999: New York Liberty
guard Teresa Weatherspoon nails a shot
from beyond the midcourt line with 2.4
seconds remaining to give the Liberty a
68-67 victory over the Houston Comets
in Game 2 of the WNBA Finals. The shot
sends the series to a decisive Game 3,
which the Comets win to claim their
third straight WNBA title.
June 7, 2000: Cleveland Rockers
forward Eva Nemcova ends her recordstreak of 66 consecutive free throws with
a miss against Orlando. Nemcova did
not miss from the foul line from June 14,
1999 to June 5, 2000.
July 17, 2000: The West defeats the
East 73-61 at the 2000 WNBA All-Star
Game, hosted by the Phoenix Mercury
at America West Arena. Houstons Tina
Thompson captures MVP honors.
August 25, 2000: Cleveland Rockers
guard Suzie McConnell Serio is named
the recipient of the first Kim Perrot
Sportsmanship Award presented by
American General, named in honor of
Houstons Kim Perrot, who died of cancer
in 1999.

WNBA TIMELINE
August 26, 2000: Cynthia Cooper turns
in a clutch performance to earn her
fourth WNBA Finals MVP as the Houston
Comets claim fourth straight title by
defeating the New York Liberty. In Game
1 at Madison Square Garden, Cooper
converts a crucial three-point play with
25.4 seconds remaining to push the
Comets lead to five. In Game 2, she
scores six of her 25 points in overtime
and nine of Houstons final 18 points. It
marks Coopers last appearance in the
WNBA Finals. She retires as the WNBAs
all-time scoring leader.
June 2, 2001: Houstons Van Chancellor
becomes first WNBA coach to record
100 victories as the Comets defeat the
Detroit Shock 74-73.

August 11, 2001: Los Angeles


becomes the first team to go undefeated
at home for an entire season, finishing
16-0 at the STAPLES Center.
August 27, 2001: The Charlotte
Sting, after dropping the opener of the
Eastern Conference Finals at home, go
into Madison Square Garden and take
both games against the Liberty to derail
New Yorks hopes of making a third
consecutive trip to the WNBA Finals.
Charlotte advances to the Finals after a
1-10 season start.

June 7, 2001: Utah Starzz center


Margo Dydek records the WNBAs second
triple-double, setting a league record
for blocked shots in the process as her 12
points, 11 rebounds and 10 blocks leads
Utah to an 82-79 win over Orlando.

September 1, 2001: The Los


Angeles Sparks claim their first WNBA
Championship to give the city of
Los Angeles a sweep of professional
basketball titles in 2001. Lisa Leslie
becomes the first WNBA player to
capture all three MVP awards in the
same season, joining NBA greats
Shaquille ONeal, Michael Jordan and
Willis Reed as the only pro hoopsters to
accomplish this feat.

July 3, 2001: Washington and Seattle


battle through quadruple overtime the
longest game in WNBA history before
the Mystics edge the Storm 72-69.

Sparks coach Michael Cooper becomes


the first person to claim NBA and WNBA
titles, having won five championships as
a player with the Lakers.

July 7, 2001: Minnesota Lynx guard


Katie Smith sets the WNBA singlegame scoring record with a 46-point
performance, including six threepointers, in a 100-95 overtime loss to
Los Angeles.

September 1, 2001: The WNBA


welcomes its 10 millionth fan prior
to Game 2 of the WNBA Finals at the
STAPLES Center.

July 14, 2001: The West wins the


2001 WNBA All-Star Game in Orlando,
defeating the East 80-72. Lisa Leslie
earns her second All-Star MVP award.
July 30, 2001: Lisa Leslie scores her
2,538th point to become the WNBAs
career scoring leader, surpassing Cynthia
Cooper.
August 10, 2001: Katie Smith scores
22 points in Minnesotas 65-51 win over
Seattle to break the WNBA single-season
scoring record of 686 points set by
Cynthia Cooper in 1999.

November 13, 2001: The Seattle


Storm win the first pick in the 2002
WNBA Draft in the inaugural WNBA
Draft Lottery.
June 4, 2002: Katie Smith becomes
the WNBAs all-time career leader for
three-pointers (233), surpassing Cynthia
Cooper (232).
June 5, 2002: Teresa Weatherspoon
becomes the first WNBA player to
record 1,000 assists during the Libertys
60-59 victory over the Detroit Shock at
Madison Square Garden.

June 8, 2002: The Orlando Miracle


and the Cleveland Rockers square off for
the longest game in WNBA history. The
Miracle claims a 103-99 victory in the 2:57
contest that spans three overtime periods.
June 22, 2002: Utah Starzz forward
Natalie Williams records the first 20/20
performance in WNBA history when she
scores 22 points and grabs 20 rebounds
in Utahs 77-61 win over the Sacramento
Monarchs at ARCO Arena.
July 15, 2002: The West earns its
fourth straight victory in the 2002
WNBA All-Star Game in Washington,
D.C., edging the East 81-76. Lisa Leslie
takes All-Star MVP honors for the second
straight year and third time in her career.
July 22, 2002: Lisa Leslie becomes the first
WNBA player to record 3,000 points during
the Sparks92-84 victory over Orlando at the
STAPLES Center. Leslie records 24 points and
21 rebounds (tying the league record she set
on 6/19/98) in the victory.
July 30, 2002: Lisa Leslie becomes the
first WNBA player to dunk in a game
when she throws down a one-handed
breakaway layup with 4:44 remaining in
the first half in Los Angeles 82-73 loss to
Miami at the STAPLES Center.
August 9, 2002: Margo Dydek becomes the
first WNBA player to record 500 career blocks.
August 15, 2002: Washington Mystics
forward Chamique Holdsclaw becomes
the first player to lead the league in both
scoring (19.9 ppg) and rebounding (11.6
rpg) in a single season.
August 29, 2002: Los Angeles Sparks
rookie guard Nikki Teasley nails the
game-winning shot in the waning
seconds of Game 2 of the WNBA Finals to
give the Sparks their second consecutive
WNBA Championship, defeating the
New York Liberty.
Lisa Leslie earns WNBA Finals MVP
honors for the second straight year.

WNBA TIMELINE
October 8, 2002: The NBA Board of
Governors votes to restructure the WNBA
to allow individual team ownership, to
allow teams to be owned by non-NBA
owners and to be located in non-NBA
markets.
October 21, 2002: The WNBA
announces that the Miracle will be
relocated from Orlando to a city to be
designated by the WNBA.
November 27, 2002: The Miami
Heat organization elects not to assume
ownership of the Sol.
December 5, 2002: The WNBA
announces that the Utah Starzz will
relocate to San Antonio for the 2003
season.
December 30, 2002: The Portland
Trailblazers organization elects not to
assume ownership of the Fire.
January 10, 2003: San Antonio
announces Silver Stars as its official
team name.
January 28, 2003: The Connecticut
Sun join the WNBA for 2003, as the
Mohegan Tribe of Indians become the
first non-NBA owner in league history.
The Orlando Miracle become the
Connecticut Sun.
April 24, 2003: The WNBA holds the
second annual Draft Lottery and a
Dispersal Draft to disseminate players
from the Miami Sol and Portland Fire.
The Cleveland Rockers win the lottery,
while the Detroit Shock make Ruth Riley,
formerly of the Sol, the first selection in
the Dispersal Draft.
April 25, 2003: At 3 a.m., the WNBA
and the WNBAPA sign the leagues
second Collective Bargaining Agreement.
The agreement is for four years, with
a league option for a fifth, and gives
WNBA players the first free agency rights
in the history of womens professional
team sports.

April 25, 2003: The league holds the


2003 WNBA Draft, and Cleveland takes
Mississippi States LaToya Thomas as the
first overall pick.
May 23, 2003: Chamique Holdsclaw
breaks the WNBA record for rebounds in
a game grabbing 24 in the Washington
Mystics season-opening win over the
Charlotte Sting. She also added 22 points
and become the first WNBA player
to record two 20-point, 20-rebound
performances in a career.
June 7, 2003: Seattle Storm center
Lauren Jackson becomes the youngest
player in WNBA history to reach the
1,000 point milestone at age 22.
June 10, 2003: Minnesotas Katie
Smith becomes the first WNBA player
to record 300 three-point field goals in
her career.
July 12, 2003: The West captures its fifth
straight WNBA All-Star victory at New Yorks
Madison Square Garden by defeating the
East All-Stars 84-75, while Los Angeless
Nikki Teasley earns MVP honors.
August 25, 2003: Nikki Teasley finishes
the year averaging 11.5 points, 6.3
assists, and 5.1 rebounds becoming the
first player in WNBA history to average
more than ten points, five assists, and
five rebounds in a season.
September 14, 2003: Seattles Lauren
Jackson becomes the first international
player to win the WNBAs Most Valuable
Player award.
September 16, 2003: The Detroit
Shock win their first WNBA title against
the Los Angeles Sparks in front of a
sell-out crowd and record attendance
of 22,076.
Detroits Ruth Riley records a career high
27 points in Game Three and earns the
series MVP.

September 23, 2003: Rebecca Lobo,


one of three original WNBA players,
(together with Sheryl Swoopes and Lisa
Leslie) signed by the league, retires after
a seven-year career.
December 3, 2003: The Phoenix
Mercury win the first pick in the WNBA
Draft in the 2004 WNBA Draft Lottery.
December 17, 2003: The Board of
Governors announces three rules changes.
The three-point line moves from 19 9 to
20 6, and the lane is widened from 12
to the NBA width of 16. The 30-second
shot clock resets to 20 seconds (as
opposed to 30 seconds under the previous
rule) when a defensive foul or other
defensive violation occurs with less than
20 seconds remaining on the shot clock.
January 6, 2004: The WNBA holds
a Dispersal Draft to disseminate the
players from the Cleveland Rockers. The
Phoenix Mercury select forward Penny
Taylor with the first overall selection.
April 17, 2004: The league holds the
2004 WNBA Draft, and Phoenix takes the
University of Connecticuts Diana Taurasi
as the #1 overall pick.
June 17, 2004: Ticha Penicheiro passes
Teresa Weatherspoon to take over the
number one spot in career assists.
July 29, 2004: Lisa Leslie scores her
4,000th career point and becomes the
first WNBA player to reach the milestone.
August 2-31, 2004: The WNBA stops
play to give players the opportunity to
compete in the 2004 Olympic Games in
Athens, Greece.
August 5, 2004: USA Basketball
defeats the WNBA All-Stars 74-58 as
the two teams face-off in the historic
game at Radio City Music Hall in New
York City. The game was a send off
for the US Womens National Team as
they prepared to compete in the 2004
Olympic Games in Athens.

WNBA TIMELINE
September 10, 2004: Lisa Leslie
records the WNBAs third triple-double,
tying Margo Dydeks record for blocked
shots in the process as her 29 points, 15
rebounds and 10 blocked shots leads
Los Angeles to an 81-63 victory over the
Detroit Shock.
October 12, 2004: The Seattle Storm
win their first WNBA title against the
Connecticut Sun before a sell-out crowd
of 17,072. For the first time in WNBA
history, all three games of the WNBA
Finals were sell-outs.
Seattle guard Betty Lennox averaged
22.3 points for the three games on her
way to earning the series MVP.
December 1, 2004: The Charlotte
Sting beat the odds to win the first pick
in the 2005 WNBA Draft in the fourth
annual WNBA Draft Lottery. Charlotte
had only a 9.7 percent chance of
capturing the first pick.
February 8, 2005: NBA Commissioner
David Stern announces that the WNBA
will be expanding to Chicago for the
2006 season. The Chicago Sky becomes
the second WNBA team to be owned and
run by an entity outside of the NBA. In
2003, the Connecticut Sun became the
first independently owned and operated
WNBA team.
February 15, 2005: Donna Orender is
appointed by David Stern as the second
president of the WNBA.
April 16, 2005: The league holds the
2005 WNBA Draft, and Charlotte takes
the University of Minnesota center Janel
McCarville as the #1 overall pick.
May 24, 2005: Sheila Johnson,
co-founder of Black Entertainment
Television, becomes the WNBAs first
African-American female owner when
she joined Ted Leonsis Lincoln Holdings
LLC, which in turn purchased the
Washington Mystics from Washington
Wizards owner Abe Pollin.

July 13, 2005: Katie Smith becomes


the first woman in U.S. basketball
history to score 5,000 points in her
professional career (WNBA and ABL).
August 18, 2005: Anne Donovan
becomes the first female WNBA coach
and fourth overall in the league to win
100 games.
September 18, 2005: Sheryl Swoopes
becomes the first three-time WNBA
Most Valuable Player in league history.
September 20, 2005: The Sacramento
Monarchs clinch the 2005 WNBA
Championship, bringing the city of
Sacramento their first basketball title.
October 24, 2005: The Minnesota Lynx
beat the odds to win the first pick in the
2006 WNBA Draft in the fifth annual WNBA
Draft Lottery. Minnesota had only a 16.7
percent chance of capturing the first pick.
February 1, 2006: The WNBA
announces the 2006 WNBA Draft and
Pre-Draft Camp will be held in Boston,
site of the NCAA Womens Final Four.
The WNBA events will conclude a weeklong celebration of womens basketball
emanating from Boston.
April 5, 2006: The league holds the
2006 WNBA Draft, and Minnesota takes
the Louisiana State Universitys Seimone
Augustus as the #1 overall pick.
June 13, 2006: The WNBA All-Decade
Team is selected by fans, a panel of
national and WNBA-market media and
the leagues current players and coaches.
The team is comprised of the 10 best
and most influential players from its
first 10 years of play. Players named
are: Sue Bird, Tamika Catchings, Cynthia
Cooper, Yolanda Griffith, Lauren Jackson,
Lisa Leslie, Katie Smith, Dawn Staley,
Sheryl Swoopes and Tina Thompson. Van
Chancellor, who led the Houston Comets
to consecutive WNBA championships
in the leagues first four seasons, was
named the WNBAs Coach of Decade.

July 12, 2006: The 2006 WNBA All-Star


Game takes place at New York Citys
Madison Square Garden. Four rookies
Seimone Augustus, Cappie Pondexter,
Sophia Young and Candice Dupree are
named All-Stars. The East squad, led
by All-Star MVP Katie Douglas of the
Connecticut Sun, earns its firstever
victory with a 98-82 decision. Off the
court, the inaugural All-Star Salute:
Celebrating Inspiration Luncheon is a
key highlight of the festivities as former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is
the keynote speaker.
June 23, 2006: In a game against the
San Antonio, Los Angeles Sparks center
Lisa Leslie scores the 5,000th point in
her WNBA career and becomes the first
player in WNBA history to reach that
milestone.
August 10, 2006: Diana Taurasi scores
a WNBA single-game record 47 points
in a triple-overtime game against
Houston. Taurasi would also finish the
2006 season with new WNBA records
for most points in a single-season (860)
and highest scoring average in a single
season (25.3).
August 30, 2006: As part of the
Leagues 10th Anniversary season, the
WNBA Greatest Moment presented by
AOL.com is unveiled during Game 1 of
the 2006 WNBA Finals. Fans, who were
able to log on to www.aol.com/wnba,
voted Teresa Weatherspoons half-court,
buzzer-beater a shot that propelled
the New York Liberty to victory in Game
2 of the 1999 WNBA Finals and on to a
deciding Game 3 against the Houston
Comets as their favorite moment in
the WNBAs 10-year history.
September 3, 2006: Lisa Leslie of the
Los Angeles Sparks is named MVP for
the third time in her career after having
also earned the honor in 2001 and
2004. Leslie joined the Houston Comets
Sheryl Swoopes as the only players in
WNBA history to capture MVP honors
three times.

WNBA TIMELINE
September 9, 2006: The 2006 WNBA
Finals see the Detroit Shock earn their
second league championship when they
topped the Sacramento Monarchs in the
first WNBA Finals match up ever to reach a
fifth and deciding game. The historic game
featured a sellout crowd of 19,671 at Joe
Louis Arena in Detroit, the second highest
Finals crowd in WNBA history. Detroits
Deanna Nolan is named Finals MVP.
October 26, 2006: The Phoenix
Mercury wins the sixth annual Draft
Lottery and earns the top pick in the
2007 WNBA Draft. It marks the first time
that the team whose odds of winning
the top pick were mathematically the
smallest actually came away with the
#1 pick.
November 7, 2006: The WNBA
announces the creation of the Dawn
Staley Community Leadership
Award. The award will be presented
to the player who best exemplifies
the characteristics of a leader in the
community and will reflect Staleys
contagious leadership, spirit, charitable
efforts and love for the game.
December 7, 2006: The WNBA Board
of Governors approves the sale of the Los
Angeles Sparks to an investment group
led by Katherine E. Goodman and Carla J.
Christofferson.
December 13, 2006: The Charlotte
Bobcats Organization announces that it
will no longer operate the Charlotte Sting.
January 8, 2007: The WNBA holds
a Dispersal Draft to disseminate the
players from the Charlotte Sting. The
Chicago Sky select guard Monique Currie
with the first overall selection.
January 30, 2007: Rule changes are
announced for the 2007 season and
include the following: the backcourt
rule requires offensive teams to bring
the ball across the mid-court line within
eight seconds rather than 10 seconds;
the timeout rule requires that officials

grant requests for a timeout (full or


20-second) by a player in the game or
the head coach; and the teams will now
be able to designate 11 active players
and up to two inactive players on playoff
rosters, with the ability to activate any
inactive players on a game-by-game
basis.
January 31, 2007: The WNBA Board
of Governors approves the sale of the
Houston Comets to Hilton Koch/Hilton
Acquisitions, LLC.
February 16, 2007: Electronic Arts
announces that six WNBA players are
featured in a new videogame NBA
STREET Homecourt. Sue Bird, Tamika
Catchings, Lauren Jackson, Lisa Leslie,
Sheryl Swoopes and Diana Taurasi are
the first female professional athletes
to ever be featured and go head-tohead with their male counterparts in a
videogame.
March 31, 2007: Former University of
Texas Head Coach Jody Conradt becomes
the inaugural recipient of the WNBA
Inspiring Coach Award.
April 4, 2007: The 2007 WNBA Draft
presented by adidas takes place in
Cleveland, marking the second straight
year that the draft was held immediately
following the NCAA Womens Division
I Championship Game and conducted
in the same city as the Final Four. The
Phoenix Mercury make Lindsey Harding
the top overall pick before trading her
to the Minnesota Lynx in exchange for
Tangela Smith. The fast-paced draft
earned a place in league history when
Jessica Davenport, the second overall
pick, was subsequently traded from
San Antonio to New York in exchange
for all-star guard Becky Hammon and a
future selection. It marked the first time
in WNBA history that the top two picks
were traded on Draft Day.

July 15, 2007: The 2007 WNBA All-Star


Game, the leagues eighth such contest,
is played in front of a sellout audience
on July 15 at the Verizon Center in
Washington, D.C. A crowd of 19,487
fans witnessed the East defeat the West,
103-99, as Cheryl Ford of the Detroit
Shock clinched the MVP honors. A key
highlight of the All-Star festivities in
2007 was the second annual All-Star
Salute: Inspiring Women Luncheon,
featuring keynote speaker and Secretary
of State Dr. Condoleezza Rice.
July 15, 2007: Signaling a major
milestone in its second decade, the
WNBA reaches an eight-year agreement
with ESPN to have ABC, ESPN and
ESPN2 televise games through the 2016
season. The agreement was announced
in conjunction with the 2007 WNBA
All-Star Game by Donna Orender,
WNBA President, and John Skipper,
ESPN Executive Vice President, Content.
The agreement extends the WNBAs
relationship with ESPN, which began
with the leagues inaugural season in
1997, to 20 seasons.
July 24, 2007: Seattles Lauren Jackson
scores 47 points in a 97-96 overtime loss
to the Washington Mystics, tying Diana
Taurasi for the WNBA record for most
points in a single game.
July 27, 2007: Lauren Jackson scores
her 4,000th career point during a 89-75
win over the Indiana Fever, becoming
the youngest and fastest player in league
history to reach the milestone. Jackson
reaches the milestone in 209 games.
September 5, 2007: Lauren Jackson is
named MVP of the league for the second
time in her career after having also
earned the honor in 2003. Jackson led
the WNBA in scoring, rebounding and
double-doubles and was also named
the WNBAs Player of the Week on five
occasions. Jackson joined Lisa Leslie,
Sheryl Swoopes and Cynthia Cooper
as the only players in WNBA history to
capture multiple MVP honors.

WNBA TIMELINE
September 16, 2007: The 2007 WNBA
Finals see the Phoenix Mercury win their
first-ever championship behind the play
of Diana Taurasi, Penny Taylor and Cappie
Pondexter, who was named Finals MVP.
The Mercury capped the most exciting
WNBA season ever by defeating the
defending champion Detroit Shock in
five games. It marked the first time that
a the WNBA Championship has been
won on the road, and Mercury head
coach Paul Westhead became the first
head coach to win both a WNBA title and
an NBA title (1980, Los Angeles Lakers).
Total attendance for the 2007 WNBA
Finals between the Phoenix Mercury
and the Detroit Shock was 74,178,
establishing a new all-time WNBA Finals
record. In addition, Game 5s crowd of
22,076 at The Palace of Auburn Hills tied
the all-time, single-game attendance
record for the WNBA Finals (also set on
Sept. 16 2003 of the 2003 WNBA Finals,
Los Angeles at Detroit).
October 17, 2007: WNBA President
Donna Orender announces that the
City of Atlanta was awarded a WNBA
expansion team for the 2008 season.
The new team will be owned and
operated by Atlanta businessman J.
Ronald Terwilliger.
October 23, 2007: The Los Angeles
Sparks win the seventh annual Draft
Lottery and earned the top pick in the
2008 WNBA Draft. The Sparks won the
lottery for the first time in franchise
history, after tying the Minnesota Lynx
for fewest wins in 2007.
January 23, 2008: The Atlanta
expansion franchise unveils their team
name, logo and colors. The Atlanta
Dreams color scheme will consist of sky
blue and red.
January 28, 2008: The WNBA and
the WNBAPA sign the leagues third
collective bargaining agreement
covering six seasons, commencing with
the 2008 season and continuing through
2013.

January 29, 2008: Rule changes are


announced for the 2008 season and
include the following: the inbounding
rule will permit a player to pass the ball
anywhere (frontcourt or backcourt) on
the court during the final minute of the
fourth period and the final minute of any
overtime period; players not occupying
lane spaces shall now remain behind the
three-point line (above the free-throw
line extended) during free-throws;
and instant-replay rules will now
require automatic video reviews by the
officiating crew in the case of flagrant
fouls that result in ejections and other
player altercations.
February 6, 2008: The WNBA holds an
Expansion Draft to build the inaugural
roster of the Atlanta Dream. The Dream
selected one player from each team,
including Betty Lennox, Katie Feenstra,
Erika DeSouza and Kristin Haynie. The
Dream also orchestrated trades for Iziane
Castro Marques and Ivory Latta.
February 28, 2008: Force 10 Hoops,
L.L.C., the entity owned by Seattle
businesswomen and civic leaders Anne
Levinson, Ginny Gilder, Lisa Brummel
and Dawn Trudeau, purchases the
Seattle Storm. Seven WNBA teams now
fall under the independent ownership
model: the Atlanta Dream, Chicago
Sky, Connecticut Sun, Houston Comets,
Los Angeles Sparks, Seattle Storm and
Washington Mystics.
April 4, 2008: North Carolina State
Head Coach Kay Yow is honored with the
WNBAs Inspiring Coach Award during
the Womens Final Four activities in
Tampa, Florida.
April 9, 2008: The 2008 WNBA Draft
presented by adidas takes place in Tampa,
marking the third year that the draft was
held immediately following the NCAA
Womens Division I Championship Game
and conducted in the same city as the
Final Four. Candace Parker, Sylvia Fowles
and Candice Wiggins were selected as the
top three overall picks.

May 17, 2008: Candace Parker of the


Los Angeles Sparks nearly posts a tripledouble in her pro debut on vs. Phoenix.
She had 34 points, 12 rebounds and 8
assists. Her 34 points broke the record
for a rookie in a debut game.
May 29, 2008: On May 29 in a doubleovertime loss at Indiana, Candace Parker
becomes the first player in WNBA history
to record a 5x5, which is total of five or
more in five different categories. Parker
had 16 points, 16 rebounds, six blocks,
five assists and five steals.
June 6, 2008 Tina Thompson of the
Houston Comets becomes just the
second player in WNBA history to reach
the 5,000 point milestone, joining Lisa
Leslie.
June 22& 24, 2008: Candace Parker
dunks in back-to-back games, joining
Lisa Leslie as the only players to have
dunked in a WNBA game.
June 28, 2008: Lisa Leslie of the Los
Angeles Sparks becomes the first WNBA
player to record 3,000 career rebounds.
July 30, 2008: Robin Roberts, coanchor of ABC News Good Morning
America, is honored as the recipient
of the 2008 WNBA Inspiration Award.
Roberts is the keynote speaker at the
WNBA Inspiring Women Luncheon in San
Francisco, an event that also honored the
U.S. Olympic Womens Basketball Team
and served as a final send-off to the
Beijing for the Olympic Games.
July 28-Aug. 27, 2008: The
WNBA stops play to give players the
opportunity to compete in the 2008
Olympic Games in Beijing, China. The
U.S. Olympic Womens Basketball Team
defeated Australia in the gold medal
game, while Russia defeated China for
the bronze. The United States has now
won four consecutive Olympic gold
medals.

WNBA TIMELINE
August 31, 2008: Katie Smith of the
Detroit Shock reaches the 5,000 career
point milestone, joining Lisa Leslie and
Tina Thompson.
September 5, 2008: Ticha Penicheiro
of the Sacramento Monarchs becomes
the first player in WNBA history to record
2,000 career assists.
October 3, 2008: Los Angeles Sparks
forward Candace Parker is named the
Hanns-G Go Beyond Rookie of the Year
as well as the WNBA Most Valuable
Player presented by T-Mobile. It marks
the first time a rookie won both awards
in the same year. The top overall pick in
the 2008 WNBA Draft, Parker capped a
season in which she also earned AllWNBA First Team honors, two Hanns-G
Go Beyond Rookie of the Month Awards
(May and July), one Player of the Week
Award (Aug. 31) and the Peak Performer
Rebounding Award.
October 5, 2008: The 2008 WNBA
Finals see the Detroit Shock sweep
the San Antonio Silver Stars in three
games. The Shock earned their third
championship in six years. Detroits
Katie Smith was named Finals MVP.
December 2, 2008: The League
announces that the Houston Comets, an
original member of the WNBA, would
suspend operations.
December 9, 2008: The WNBA holds
a Dispersal Draft of the Houston Comets
players. Teams drafted in inverse order
of their regular-season finish in 2008.
The Atlanta Dream selected Sancho
Lyttle with the first pick, the Washington
Mystics chose Matee Ajavon with the
second selection and the Chicago Sky
took Mistie Williams with the third pick.
December 9, 2008: The Atlanta Dream
win the eighth annual WNBA Draft
Lottery and earned the top pick in the
2009 WNBA Draft. The winning team
had 420 chances out of 1,000 to receive

the first overall selection. The lottery


went exactly according to odds for the
first time in WNBA history.
February 5, 2009: The WNBA Board of
Governors votes to allow the expanded
use of instant replay by game officials.
The two modifications will allow
referees to use instant replay 1.) to
determine at any point during a game
whether a field goal was correctly scored
as a two- or three-point field goal,
and, for the purposes of awarding the
correct number of free throws, whether
a shooter was fouled while taking a twoor three-point attempt and 2.) when the
game clock malfunctions during a play
concluding with no time remaining on
the clock (0:00) at the end of any quarter
or overtime period.
April 7, 2009: University of Tennessee
head coach Pat Summit is named the
recipient of the WNBAs Inspiring Coach
Award.
April 9, 2009: The 2009 WNBA Draft
presented by adidas takes place at the
NBA Entertainment studios in Secaucus,
NJ. Angel McCoughtry, Marissa Coleman
and Kristi Toliver were selected as the
top three overall picks.
May 13, 2009: WNBA LiveAccess, a
new feature on WNBA.com that provides
fans with free access to more than 200
live game Webcasts, is launched and
allows fans around the world to access
live game Webcasts on individual team
Web sites.
June 1, 2009: The Phoenix Mercury
announces a groundbreaking marquee
partnership with LifeLock to launch
the first-ever branded jersey in WNBA
or NBA history. The LifeLock name will
appear on the front of Phoenix Mercury
player jerseys and on warm-up suits
through the 2011 season.

June 5, 2009: The Los Angeles Sparks


reach an agreement with the Farmers
Insurance Group of Companies to
become the second team to secure a
marquee partnership and wear branded
jerseys. The Farmers Insurance Group of
Companies name and logo will appear
on player jerseys.
June 14, 2009: Tamika Raymond is
named the recipient of the 2009 Dawn
Staley Community Leadership Award.
July 17, 2009: Sue Bird of the Seattle
Storm reaches the 3,000-point plateau,
becoming just the third player in league
history to score 3,000 points and hand
out 1,000 career assists. (Shannon
Johnson and Vickie Johnson)
July 29, 2009: Cokie Roberts, political
commentator for ABC News, senior news
analyst for NPR News, and bestselling
author, is honored as the recipient of the
2009 WNBA Inspiration Award. Roberts
served as the keynote speaker at the
WNBA Inspiring Women Luncheon in
Chicago.
August 10, 2009: Lisa Leslie of the
Los Angeles Sparks becomes the first
player in WNBA history to record 6,000
career points.

August 15, 2009: Lauren Jackson of


the Seattle Storm scores her 5,000th
point against the Atlanta Dream,
becoming the youngest and fastest
player in league history to reach the
milestone. Jackson joins Lisa Leslie,
Tina Thompson and Katie Smith as the
WNBAs 5,000 point scorers.
September 5, 2009: Diana Taurasi of
the Phoenix Mercury scores her 4,000th
point, eclipsing Lauren Jackson as the
youngest and fastest player in league
history to reach the milestone. Taurasi
accomplishes the feat in 197 games.

WNBA TIMELINE
September 26, 2009: Lisa Leslie tallies
22 points and 9 rebounds in the final game
of her WNBA career as the Los Angeles
Sparks are defeated by the Phoenix
Mercury in the Western Conference Finals.
Leslie had previously announced that 2009
would be her final season, and retires as
the all-time WNBA leader in points (6,263)
and rebounds (3,307).
September 29, 2009: The Mercurys
Diana Taurasi wins the WNBA Most
Valuable Player Award presented by Kia
Motors, marking the first MVP honor of
her professional career. Taurasi tallied
20.4 points per game and recorded 20+
points in 20 games in 2009.
October 9, 2009: The Phoenix Mercury
defeats the Indiana Fever to clinch the
WNBA Championship for the second
time in three years. Finals MVP Diana
Taurasi, Cappie Pondexter and Penny
Taylor led the Mercury and held off a late
rally by the tenacious Indiana Fever for
a 94-86 victory in the deciding Game 5.
The 2009 WNBA Finals also featured three
sellouts plus the highest total attendance
figure (82,018) in WNBA Finals history.
Overall, average attendance for the 2009
WNBA Playoffs increased 18.5% over
2008 (9,979 vs. 8,420).
October 20, 2009: The Detroit Shock
relocates to Tulsa, Oklahoma under
the ownership of Bill Cameron, David
Box and Tulsa Pro Hoops, LLC. Nolan
Richardson is named the teams general
manager and head coach.
October 29, 2009: Kathy Betty
becomes managing partner of the
Atlanta Dream after the investment
group Dream Too, LLC purchases the
team from Terwilliger.
November 5, 2009 : The Minnesota
Lynx win the ninth annual WNBA Draft
Lottery and earned the top pick in the
2010 WNBA Draft. Minnesota had 428
chances out of 1,000 to receive the first
overall selection by virtue of owning
New Yorks combinations (261) in
addition to its own (167).

November 20, 2009: The Maloof


Family announces that they will
no longer operate the Sacramento
Monarchs.
December 4, 2009: The WNBA
Competition Committee and Board of
Governors approves the expanded use
of instant replay by game officials in the
following situations: 1.) To determine
at any point during the game whether a
24-second shot clock violation occurred
prior to the release of a successful field
goal attempt or prior to a foul being
committed and 2.) To determine during
the last minute of regulation play and
the last minute of any overtime period
which player last touched the ball prior
to it going out-of-bounds or whether
the ball was last touched simultaneously
by two opponents.
December 14, 2009: The WNBA holds
a Dispersal Draft of the Sacramento
Monarchs players. The New York Liberty
selected Nicole Powell with the first
pick while the Minnesota Lynx chose
Rebekkah Brunson second and the
Connecticut Sun took DeMya Walker
with the third selection. The Chicago
Sky selected Courtney Paris and the San
Antonio Silver Stars took Laura Harper
to round out the top five picks. Teams
drafted in inverse order of their regularseason finish in 2009.
January 23, 2010: The Tulsa franchise,
with new ownership that brought the
team from its former home in Detroit,
announces it will keep the name Shock,
and unveils a new logo and color scheme
featuring black, red and gold.
April 8, 2010: The 2010 WNBA Draft
presented by adidas takes place at the
NBA Entertainment studios in Secaucus,
NJ. Tina Charles, Monica Wright, Kelsey
Griffin, Epiphanny Prince and Jayne
Appel, respectively, were the top five
selections.

May 15, 2010: The newly relocated


Shock complete with new ownership,
a new head coach in Nolan Richardson,
new colors and a new logo tip-off
their first game in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
August 8, 2010: Tina Thompson
surpasses Lisa Leslies WNBA career
scoring mark of 6,263, making her the
highest scoring player in league history.
August 13, 2010: Phoenixs Tangela
Smith plays in her 411th career game,
breaking Vickie Johnsons previous record
for most career games played.
August 15, 2010: In a game against
Indiana, rookie Tina Charles of the
Connecticut Sun sets WNBA singleseason records for most double-doubles
and total rebounds in a single season.
September 7, 2010: Atlantas Angel
McCoughtry scores a WNBA Playoffs
record 42 points in Game Two of the
Eastern Conference Finals, a 105-93
victory over the New York Liberty. In
that same game, New Yorks Cappie
Pondexter tallies 36 points. Their
combined total of 78 points set a WNBA
record for most total points by two
players in the same post-season game.
September 16, 2010: The
Seattle Storm won the 2010 WNBA
championship by defeating the Atlanta
Dream 87-84 in Game 3 of the WNBA
Finals in Atlantas Philips Arena. The
Storm swept the Dream 3-0 in the bestof-five series and Seattle center Lauren
Jackson, the leagues regular season
MVP, was named MVP of The Finals. It
is the Storms second championship and
first since 2004.
December 3, 2010: Donna Orender
steps down as WNBA President to launch
her own marketing, media and strategy
company.

WNBA TIMELINE
February 28, 2011: As part of WNBA
Live - Manchester 2011 a new,
multiyear partnership between the
Manchester (Eng.) City Council and the
NBA, WNBA and USA Basketball it is
announced that the Atlanta Dream will
participate in the first WNBA game to
be played in Europe. The game is set for
May 29, 2011 vs. Standard Life Team
GB (Great Britains national team) at
Manchester Evening News Arena. The
partnership will promote women in
sport and encourage participation in
team sports.
March 3, 2011: At a press conference
at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, the
WNBA announces that the Silver Stars
will host the 2011 All-Star Game for
the first time in franchise history. The
contest, set for Saturday, July 23, is to be
the second WNBA All-Star Game played
in a Western Conference venue and the
first since the 2000 game was held in
Phoenix.
March 8, 2011: In honor of Womens
History Month and International
Womens Day, the WNBA officially
announced plans to celebrate its 15th
season. Among those would be the
selection of the Top 15 Players and the
Top 15 Moments in league history. Key
among other planned celebrations
would be a nationally televised game
(ESPN2) in which the New York Liberty
would visit the Los Angeles Sparks on
June 21, fifteen years to the date of
the leagues inaugural game in 1997
featuring those same two teams.
March 28, 2011: Sheryl Swoopes, 40,
returns to the WNBA, signing to play
with the Tulsa Shock after a two-year
hiatus. An inaugural member of the
WNBA and a member of the leagues
All-Decade Team selected in 2006,
Swoopes resume includes four WNBA
championships as a member of the
Houston Comets (1997-2000), three
league MVP awards (2000, 2002, 2005)
and three Defensive Player of the Year
honors (2000, 2002, 2003).

April 7, 2011: The Washington Mystics


sign a marquee partnership with Inova
Health System, becoming the fifth
WNBA team to have such a partnership.
Players will wear Inova Hospital Systems
name and logo on the front of their
home and away jerseys during the 2011
WNBA season.
April 7, 2011: The WNBA and partner
adidas unveiled new uniforms for
all 12 teams featuring Revolution 30
technology and womens basketball
specific TECHFIT base layers.

and community service, as well as


to contributions to team success
and womens basketball, voting was
conducted by fans, select national and
WNBA-market media, and by current
players and coaches. The players named
were: Sue Bird, Tamika Catchings,
Cynthia Cooper, Yolanda Griffith, Becky
Hammon, Lauren Jackson, Lisa Leslie,
Ticha Penicheiro, Cappie Pondexter, Katie
Smith, Dawn Staley, Sheryl Swoopes,
Diana Taurasi, Tina Thompson, and
Teresa Weatherspoon.

April 11, 2011: The WNBA becomes


the first professional sports league
to conduct its annual Draft at ESPN
headquarters in Bristol, Conn. The
Minnesota Lynx made Maya Moore the
top overall selection of the 2011 WNBA
Draft presented by adidas. Australian
native Elizabeth Cambage, selected
second by the Tulsa Shock, and Courtney
Vandersloot, tapped third by the Chicago
Sky, rounded out the top three picks.

August 9, 2011
In a road game at the Phoenix Mercury,
Minnesota Lynx all-stars Lindsay Whalen
and Seimone Augustus become the
35th and 36th players to to surpass the
3,000-point mark for their respective
careers, but the first pair of teammates
to eclipse the mark in the same game.
In the process, Augustus also tied the
Mercurys Diana Taurasi as the fastest
player in WNBA history to reach 3,000
(151 games).

April 21, 2011: Laurel J. Richie, a


veteran of more than three decades
in consumer marketing, corporate
branding, public relations and corporate
management, is appointed President
of the WNBA, NBA Commissioner David
Stern announced. Laurel leaves her
post as Senior Vice President and Chief
Marketing Officer for Girl Scouts of the
USA to join the WNBA.
June 21, 2011
The Los Angeles Sparks host the New
York Liberty at STAPLES Center in the
WNBAs 15th Anniversary Game, played
15 years to the day of the leagues
inaugural matchup between the same
two teams in LA. The Sparks win, 96-91.
July 23, 2011
In honor of the WNBAs 15th season, the
league unveiled its Top 15 Players of All
Time during a halftime ceremony live
on ABC at the 2011 WNBA All-Star Game
presented by adidas. With consideration
given to on-court performance and
ability, leadership, sportsmanship,

August 22, 2011


The WNBA and Boost Mobile, an industry
leader in no-contract wireless service,
announced a landmark multiyear
marketing partnership that made Boost
Mobile the first league-wide marquee
partner of the WNBA. As part of the
deal, the Boost Mobile brand logo was
subsequently featured on the front of
the game jerseys of 10 of the WNBAs
12 teams. It marked the first time the
WNBA had a league partner with jersey
branding for multiple teams throughout
the season other than adidas, the
leagues official outfitter.
October 2, 2011
Despite falling to the host Minnesota
Lynx in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals,
Atlanta Dream forward Angel
McCoughtry set Finals records for points
in a quarter (19 in the third), points in a
half (27 in the second), and consecutive
points (14 from late in the first half into
the third quarter).

WNBA TIMELINE
October 5, 2011
The Atlanta Dreams Angel McCoughtry
surpasses the WNBA Finals record (set
by her in 2010) for most points in a
single game with 38 in a loss to the host
Minnesota Lynx.
October 7, 2011
In a celebration of its 15th season,
the WNBA and partner Boost Mobile
unveiled the Top 15 Moments in league
history as voted by fans. The top
moment was Teresa Weatherspoons
half-court shot at the buzzer to win
Game 2 of the 1999 WNBA Finals for the
New York Liberty and send that series to
a decisive third game. Ranking second
was the WNBAs first ever game (NY
Liberty at LA Sparks, June 21, 1997);
third was Sparks center Lisa Leslie
throwing down the first dunk in WNBA
history in the first half of a game vs. the
Miami Sol.
October 7, 2011
The Minnesota Lynx captured their first
WNBA title with a 73-67 win over the
Atlanta Dream. Lynx guard/forward
Seimone Augustus was named Finals
MVP after leading the Lynx to a sweep in
the best-of-five series. Augustus posted
22 points and seven assists in Game 1
and had a franchise-playoff record 36
points in Game 2, including 15 in the
fourth quarter.
April 16, 2012
The 2012 WNBA Draft presented by
Boost Mobile takes place at ESPN
headquarters in Bristol, CT, marking
the second straight year that the
draft was held on the campus of the
leagues broadcast partner. Stanfords
Nnemkadi Ogwumike (Sparks),
Tennessees Shekinna Stricklen (Storm),
Notre Dames Devereaux Peters (Lynx),
Tennessees Glory Johnson (Shock), and
Miamis Shenise Johnson (Silver Stars)
are the top five picks.

June 3, 2012
Angel McCoughtry of the Atlanta Dream
sets the WNBAs single-game mark for
most successful free throws without a
miss, going 17-for-17 vs. Chicago.
June 15, 2012
With a win over Phoenix on June 15, the
defending champion Minnesota Lynx
set a WNBA record for the best start to
a season, going 10-0 out of the gate
before being upended by Seattle.
June 16, 2012
Already the WNBAs career steals leader,
Tamika Catchings also took over the top
spot in league history for career free
throws made when she hit six of eight
from the charity stripe against Chicago.
June 17, 2012
Connecticuts Tina Charles, with 23
points and 22 rebounds at Atlanta,
became the first player in WNBA history
to log three 20-20 games in a career.
July 14-Aug. 15, 2012
The WNBA temporarily stops play to
give players the opportunity to compete
in the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
The U.S. Olympic Womens Basketball
Team comprised of 12 WNBA players
defeated France in the gold medal game.
The win gave the United States women
their fifth consecutive Olympic gold
medal and, dating back to the bronze
medal game in 1992, stretched the
teams winning streak to 41 games.
Sept. 18, 2012
Already the WNBAs all-time leading
scorer, Tina Thompson (Seattle) became
the first player in the history of the
league to surpass 7,000 career points
with her jump shot at the 9:03 mark of
the second quarter of the Storms victory
over visiting Chicago at KeyArena. The
milestone capped a season in which
Thompson also became the first WNBA
player to top 15,000 minutes played and
2,450 field goals made.

Aug. 28, 2012


A put-back basket against San Antonio
by Minnesota Lynx center McWilliamsFranklin, moved the 14-year veteran
and six-time All-Star into first place
on the WNBAs career list for offensive
rebounds, surpassing the 1,049 of
Yolanda Griffith.
Sept. 18, 2012
Already the WNBAs all-time leading
scorer, Tina Thompson (Seattle) became
the first player in the history of the
league to surpass 7,000 career points
with her jump shot at the 9:03 mark of
the second quarter of the Storms victory
over visiting Chicago at KeyArena. The
milestone capped a season in which
Thompson also became the first WNBA
player to top 15,000 minutes played and
2,450 field goals made.
Sept. 22, 2012
Temeka Johnson of the Tulsa Shock
finished the regular season with the
leagues best single-season mark in
history for three-point FG percentage
(.531, 34 of 64). On the same day, Ticha
Penicheiro of the Chicago Sky plays the
final game of her career and, with two
assists, increases her WNBA career record
to 2,599.
Sept. 26, 2012
The WNBA Draft Lottery (to determine
the order of selection of the 2013
WNBA Draft) was held for the first
time at ESPNs studios in Bristol, Conn.,
live during the 6 p.m. ET edition of
SportsCenter. The Phoenix Mercury
ultimately won the top pick, followed
in succession by the Chicago Sky, Tulsa
Shock, and Washington Mystics.
Oct. 21, 2012
Indiana defeated the defending
champion Minnesota Lynx 3-gamesto-1, giving the Fever its first WNBA
championship in franchise history.
Following Game 4, an 87-78 home win
at Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse,
Indiana forward Tamika Catchings

WNBA TIMELINE
was named MVP of the WNBA Finals
presented by Boost Mobile. Catchings, a
three-time Olympic gold medalist and
the leagues 2011 MVP, averaged 22.3
points, 6 rebounds, and 2 steals during
the Finals.
Dec. 13, 2012
Following the leagues Board of
Governors Meeting, the WNBA
announces it will implement new
rules regarding flopping and defensive
three-seconds, while also extending
the three-point line from 20 feet, 6 1/4
inches to 22 feet, 1 3/4 inches, consistent
with the distance inherent in all FIBA
competitions. The rules will go into
effect beginning with the 2013 season.
March 28, 2013
The WNBA and ESPN announce an
extension of their partnership for
another six years, paving the way
for WNBA games to be televised on
ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2 through 2022.
The announcement, made by John
Skipper, President of ESPN, Inc. and
Co-Chairman of the Disney Media
Networks, and Laurel J. Richie, WNBA
President, extends the WNBAs television
relationship with ESPN to 26 years. With
the deal, up to 30 live games will be
televised on ABC, ESPN or ESPN2 each
season, including exclusive telecasts of
the WNBA Finals presented by Boost
Mobile.
March 28, 2013
On the same day as the WNBA and
ESPN announce an extension of their
partnership, the league also introduced
a new brand identity. The refreshed
identity reflects how far the level of play
has come in 16 years as stronger, more
agile players have made the game more
competitive. The cornerstone of the new
WNBA visual identity is a more modern
Logowoman -- the player silhouette
within the logo -- that better embodies
the athleticism and diversity of current
WNBA players while leveraging the
distinctive orange-and-oatmeal color

scheme of the leagues iconic game ball.


April 15, 2013
For the first time in the WNBAs 17
seasons, the leagues Draft is televised
live in primetime. The 2013 WNBA
Draft presented by State Farm takes
place for the third straight year at ESPN
headquarters in Bristol, Conn., this time
airing live at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN2. One
of the most anticipated draft classes in
league history is led by the 3 to See
-- Brittney Griner of Baylor, Elena Delle
Donne of Delaware, and Notre Dames
Skylar Diggins. The Phoenix Mercury
select Griner with the No. 1 overall pick;
the Chicago Sky then take Delle Donne
with the No. 2 selection, and the Tulsa
Shock claim Diggins third.

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