\r\n\r\nYes, Caitlin Clark had a huge impact on the league’s business growth this year, especially when it comes to attendance and viewership. Her games dominate records in both categories. But the Finals reinforce the truth that rabid interest in the league and extremely high-level basketball do not end with the Rookie of the Year.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“In the end, it just shows the level of the talent that we have in the WNBA,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said about making it to Game 5 (though “I wish it didn’t” reach the winner-take-all, she admitted). “I thought this was one of the strongest seasons I’ve ever been a part of. I’ve been in this league for a long, long time as a player and a coach. …I think it’s great for women’s basketball. We’re getting a lot of eyes on us, I think that’s fantastic.”\r\n\r\nYou can read Margaret Fleming's full story on the fitting finale to this record-shattering WNBA season here.\r\n\r\n","newsletter_content_3_content_article":152278,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_share_hide":0,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_category_hide":0}},"postID":151837,"postFormat":"standard"}; dataLayer.push( dataLayer_content ); \r\n\r\nWhether they reach those figures or not, these Finals are significantly outpacing last year’s and drawing their largest audiences in more than two decades, all while competing with the NFL, MLB playoffs, and college football. Game 5 will also be limited in some ways by being on ESPN instead of ABC, which aired 1993’s Hocus Pocus instead of the game.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nYes, Caitlin Clark had a huge impact on the league’s business growth this year, especially when it comes to attendance and viewership. Her games dominate records in both categories. But the Finals reinforce the truth that rabid interest in the league and extremely high-level basketball do not end with the Rookie of the Year.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“In the end, it just shows the level of the talent that we have in the WNBA,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said about making it to Game 5 (though “I wish it didn’t” reach the winner-take-all, she admitted). “I thought this was one of the strongest seasons I’ve ever been a part of. I’ve been in this league for a long, long time as a player and a coach. …I think it’s great for women’s basketball. We’re getting a lot of eyes on us, I think that’s fantastic.”\r\n\r\nYou can read Margaret Fleming's full story on the fitting finale to this record-shattering WNBA season here.\r\n\r\n","newsletter_content_3_content_article":152278,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_share_hide":0,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_category_hide":0}},"postID":151837,"postFormat":"standard"}; dataLayer.push( dataLayer_content ); \r\n\r\nThe superb play has been reflected in viewership. With 1.35 million and 1.39 million average viewers, Games 2 and 3 respectively rank as the ninth- and seventh-most-watched WNBA Finals games of all time, with the rest of those records all happening in 2001 or earlier. (Friday’s Game 4 viewership data won’t be released until Monday.) The number to beat is 3.25 million viewers for the Finals record, or 5.04 million viewers for the all-time viewership record.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nWhether they reach those figures or not, these Finals are significantly outpacing last year’s and drawing their largest audiences in more than two decades, all while competing with the NFL, MLB playoffs, and college football. Game 5 will also be limited in some ways by being on ESPN instead of ABC, which aired 1993’s Hocus Pocus instead of the game.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nYes, Caitlin Clark had a huge impact on the league’s business growth this year, especially when it comes to attendance and viewership. Her games dominate records in both categories. But the Finals reinforce the truth that rabid interest in the league and extremely high-level basketball do not end with the Rookie of the Year.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“In the end, it just shows the level of the talent that we have in the WNBA,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said about making it to Game 5 (though “I wish it didn’t” reach the winner-take-all, she admitted). “I thought this was one of the strongest seasons I’ve ever been a part of. I’ve been in this league for a long, long time as a player and a coach. …I think it’s great for women’s basketball. We’re getting a lot of eyes on us, I think that’s fantastic.”\r\n\r\nYou can read Margaret Fleming's full story on the fitting finale to this record-shattering WNBA season here.\r\n\r\n","newsletter_content_3_content_article":152278,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_share_hide":0,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_category_hide":0}},"postID":151837,"postFormat":"standard"}; dataLayer.push( dataLayer_content ); \r\n\r\n“I think this has been just great basketball, just so entertaining,” Collier told Front Office Sports before the game. “Objectively, this is a really fun series. When you’re in it, it’s very nerve-wracking, of course, but I think it’s great for the sport.”\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nThe superb play has been reflected in viewership. With 1.35 million and 1.39 million average viewers, Games 2 and 3 respectively rank as the ninth- and seventh-most-watched WNBA Finals games of all time, with the rest of those records all happening in 2001 or earlier. (Friday’s Game 4 viewership data won’t be released until Monday.) The number to beat is 3.25 million viewers for the Finals record, or 5.04 million viewers for the all-time viewership record.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nWhether they reach those figures or not, these Finals are significantly outpacing last year’s and drawing their largest audiences in more than two decades, all while competing with the NFL, MLB playoffs, and college football. Game 5 will also be limited in some ways by being on ESPN instead of ABC, which aired 1993’s Hocus Pocus instead of the game.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nYes, Caitlin Clark had a huge impact on the league’s business growth this year, especially when it comes to attendance and viewership. Her games dominate records in both categories. But the Finals reinforce the truth that rabid interest in the league and extremely high-level basketball do not end with the Rookie of the Year.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“In the end, it just shows the level of the talent that we have in the WNBA,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said about making it to Game 5 (though “I wish it didn’t” reach the winner-take-all, she admitted). “I thought this was one of the strongest seasons I’ve ever been a part of. I’ve been in this league for a long, long time as a player and a coach. …I think it’s great for women’s basketball. We’re getting a lot of eyes on us, I think that’s fantastic.”\r\n\r\nYou can read Margaret Fleming's full story on the fitting finale to this record-shattering WNBA season here.\r\n\r\n","newsletter_content_3_content_article":152278,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_share_hide":0,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_category_hide":0}},"postID":151837,"postFormat":"standard"}; dataLayer.push( dataLayer_content ); \r\n\r\nA franchise-record 18,090 fans packed the Barclays Center for the league’s first Game 5 in a Finals series since 2019, the winner-take-all matchup of what had already been a playoff series for the ages. Sabrina Ionescu’s last-second dagger to win Game 3 carved out a space in the annals of basketball history. The Lynx, led by Napheesa Collier, Courtney Williams, and Kayla McBride, had played a brand of basketball somehow both unbelievably smooth and electric.\r\n\r\nNew York clinched its first-ever WNBA title, with Jonquel Jones earning Finals MVP honors. The WNBA’s record-shattering season came to an end on the tails of a magnificent Finals series and deciding game.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“I think this has been just great basketball, just so entertaining,” Collier told Front Office Sports before the game. “Objectively, this is a really fun series. When you’re in it, it’s very nerve-wracking, of course, but I think it’s great for the sport.”\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nThe superb play has been reflected in viewership. With 1.35 million and 1.39 million average viewers, Games 2 and 3 respectively rank as the ninth- and seventh-most-watched WNBA Finals games of all time, with the rest of those records all happening in 2001 or earlier. (Friday’s Game 4 viewership data won’t be released until Monday.) The number to beat is 3.25 million viewers for the Finals record, or 5.04 million viewers for the all-time viewership record.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nWhether they reach those figures or not, these Finals are significantly outpacing last year’s and drawing their largest audiences in more than two decades, all while competing with the NFL, MLB playoffs, and college football. Game 5 will also be limited in some ways by being on ESPN instead of ABC, which aired 1993’s Hocus Pocus instead of the game.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\nYes, Caitlin Clark had a huge impact on the league’s business growth this year, especially when it comes to attendance and viewership. Her games dominate records in both categories. But the Finals reinforce the truth that rabid interest in the league and extremely high-level basketball do not end with the Rookie of the Year.\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n“In the end, it just shows the level of the talent that we have in the WNBA,” Liberty coach Sandy Brondello said about making it to Game 5 (though “I wish it didn’t” reach the winner-take-all, she admitted). “I thought this was one of the strongest seasons I’ve ever been a part of. I’ve been in this league for a long, long time as a player and a coach. …I think it’s great for women’s basketball. We’re getting a lot of eyes on us, I think that’s fantastic.”\r\n\r\nYou can read Margaret Fleming's full story on the fitting finale to this record-shattering WNBA season here.\r\n\r\n","newsletter_content_3_content_article":152278,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_share_hide":0,"newsletter_content_3_content_article_category_hide":0}},"postID":151837,"postFormat":"standard"}; dataLayer.push( dataLayer_content );