The
Connecticut Sun is a professional basketball team based in Uncasville,
Connecticut
, playing in the Eastern Conference in the Women's National
Basketball Association (WNBA). The team was founded
before the
2003 WNBA season began.
The Sun was the first WNBA franchise not to be owned by an
NBA owner; the team is owned
by the
Mohegan Indian tribe.
From 1999
to 2002, the team was known as the Orlando Miracle, playing in Orlando,
Florida
. Capitalizing on the popularity of women's
basketball in Connecticut as a result of the success of the
UConn
Huskies, the Sun had the distinction of being the only WNBA
team not to share its market with an NBA team from 2003 until the
Seattle Supersonics moved,
leaving the Storm alone in Seattle,
Washington
. Currently, the Sun is the only WNBA
franchise (besides the defunct
Miami Sol)
to finish each season with fewer than 20 losses.
The Sun have qualified for the
WNBA
Playoffs in each of its six years in Connecticut.
The franchise has been
home to many high-quality players such as 7 foot 2 inch
Margo Dydek, Indiana native Katie Douglas, University of
Connecticut
standouts Asjha Jones
and Nykesha Sales, respected veteran
forward Taj
McWilliams-Franklin and 2008
MVP runner-up point guard Lindsay
Whalen. In
2004 and
2005, the Sun went to the
WNBA Finals but fell short to
Seattle and
Sacramento, respectively.
Franchise history
The Orlando Miracle (1999-2002)
Before the franchise relocated to Connecticut in 2003, the team was
known as the Orlando Miracle.
The Miracle played their games at TD Waterhouse
Centre
(Orlando,
Florida
) as the sister team of the Orlando Magic. After the
2002 WNBA season, the NBA sold off all of
the WNBA franchises to the operators of the teams. Orlando Magic
ownership was not interested in keeping the Miracle.
No local ownership was
found, so on January 28, 2003, the Miracle were bought by the
Mohegan Native American Tribe, and it was
announced that the Miracle would move immediately to Uncasville,
Connecticut
and change their nickname to the Sun (in reference
to the Mohegan
Sun
casino owned by the tribe). The Connecticut
Sun's nickname, color scheme, and logo are very reminiscent of
another defunct Florida-based franchise, the
Miami Sol, which folded at the same time as the
Orlando Miracle.
The Connecticut Sun (2003-Present)
Rebuilding in Connecticut (2003)
The team underwent a total overhaul.
The Sun acquired
former University of
Connecticut
star Rebecca
Lobo. They lost their first game in Connecticut, 82 to
73, to the
2002 WNBA champion, the
Los Angeles Sparks. The Sun's
first win was against the
Comets in
Houston, 91 to 83. The Sun had a stellar season, posting an 18-16
record, which was good enough to make the playoffs. In the first
round, the Sun won their first playoff series in franchise history
(including years in Orlando), sweeping the
Charlotte Sting 2-0. But, in the Eastern
Conference Finals, the Sun were swept by the
Detroit Shock, who were on their way to
winning a championship.
To the WNBA Finals (2004-2005)
Head coach
Mike Thibault surprised
many by trading all-star point guard
Shannon Johnson for the 4th pick in the
WNBA Draft. With that pick the Sun
selected
Minnesota Golden
Gophers star
Lindsay Whalen
amidst rumors they would trade her to the
Minnesota Lynx. However, she remained on the
team as the Sun posted an 18-16 record in an equally-talented
Eastern Conference, winning the #1 seed. In the first round, the
Sun defeated the
Washington
Mystics 2-1. In the Eastern Conference Finals, the Sun rolled
on, sweeping the
New York Liberty.
The Sun had made it to the
WNBA Finals
in their second season of existence. In the Finals, their run would
end, as they lost a hard-fought three-game series, 2-1, to the
Seattle Storm.
In the 2005 off season, the Sun acquired 7'2" center
Margo Dydek. With a dominant post presence, the
hungry Sun controlled the Eastern Conference, posting a 26-8
record, the best regular season record for an Eastern Conference
team in WNBA history. In the playoffs, the Sun flew to the finals,
sweeping the
Detroit Shock and the
Indiana Fever. In the 2005 WNBA
Finals, the Sun were matched up against an equally dominant
Sacramento Monarchs team. Also
against the Sun's luck,
Lindsay
Whalen played through the series with injuries. The Sun had
home-court advantage, but it was of no use; the Sun lost the Finals
for the second straight year, 3 games to 1, in the first WNBA
Finals played in a best-of-five format.
The success of the franchise was rewarded in 2005, when the Sun
were selected to host the annual
WNBA
All-Star Game. The All-Star game was arguably the most exciting
in WNBA history with the two teams combining for 221 points. At the
end of the game,
Lisa Leslie became the
first woman to ever dunk in an All-Star Game.
A Disappointing End and a New Battle (2006-2007)
In 2006, the Sun would match their 2005 record and it looked like a
return trip to the Finals was certain. Mike Thibault received the
WNBA Coach of the Year
Award, and it appeared as if no team could stop the Sun. All
five starters were named to the WNBA Eastern Conference All-Star
team: Katie Douglas, Margo Dydek, Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Nykesha
Sales, and Lindsay Whalen. This feat had never before been achieved
in WNBA history. In the playoffs, the Sun would quickly sweep the
Washington Mystics. But in the
Eastern Conference Finals, the Sun were upset by the
Detroit Shock, 2 games to 1, on the Sun's home
floor.
The Sun stumbled out of the gate in 2007, posting a dismal 5-10
record by late June. However, the Sun stormed back into playoff
contention by winning 11 of their next 13 games, to finish the
regular-season at 18-16, good enough to win the #3 seed in the
Eastern Conference. In the playoffs, the Sun faced the
Indiana Fever in the first round. The Sun came
into the series having won all four regular-season contests against
the Fever. In Game 1, despite holding a 17-point lead in the third
quarter, the Sun allowed the Fever to force the first
triple-overtime game in WNBA playoff history, ending with a 93-88
victory for the Sun. However, the Fever would respond by winning
the next two games and therefore the series, including a playoff
record 22-point come-from-behind win in Game 3.
The 2007 season was the end of the Connecticut Sun that many fans
had come to know.
Rebuilding, Part Two (2008-present)
The front office knew something had to be done to save the team
from another disappointing finish. During the 2007-08 off-season,
the Connecticut Sun made major changes to their roster in an effort
to win that ever-elusive championship title. The Sun made three
trades, one sending
Katie Douglas, the
face of the franchise, to the
Indiana
Fever. In return, the Sun received
Tamika Whitmore who would surely create a
physical presence in the paint, something that the Sun had been
lacking in previous years. Following that monumental trade,
Nykesha Sales announced she would sit
out the 2008 season due to multiple nagging injuries. 7'2" center
Margo Dydek also took the season off due
to her pregnancy. With three former starters missing from the Sun
lineup, most sports critics and publications predicted the team to
finish fourth in the East. Some even claimed the Sun would finish
sixth, only ahead of the expansion
Atlanta
Dream.

Contrary to these predictions, the Sun
started the season with an outstanding 8-1 record. Soon, however,
the team found itself in a disappointing slump. The Sun went on a
five-game losing streak, the worst ever for a team under Mike
Thibault. The team finished the regular season with a 21-13 record
which placed them second in the Eastern Conference, only one game
out of first place. In the playoffs, the Sun's youth and
inexperience caught up to them; the
New
York Liberty won game three on the Sun's home floor and for the
second straight year, the Sun failed to advance to the Eastern
Conference Finals.
Exceeding many expectations during the 2008 rebuilding season, the
Sun looked to come back even stronger in 2009. There was no reason
to believe the Sun would not contend for playoff position. During
the first six seasons the team has been in Connecticut, the Sun
have tied the highest winning record of any team in the
WNBA during that time period, posting a record of
127-77, translating into a winning percentage of .623. The
Detroit Shock has the same exact record for
those six years. That success has reflected itself in the team's
attendance, which has surged from 6,025 in 2003 to 7,644 in
2008.

Mohegan Sun Arena filling up before a
game.
The
2009 WNBA All-Star Game was
held on July 25 at 3:30pm in the Mohegan Sun Arena
. It was the second time the Sun had hosted
the game. It was broadcast nationally on
ABC (
HD). By the All-Star break, the
Sun had surprised some with a mediocre start to the season. After
the first four games, the Sun held a 1-3 record. Suddenly, the Sun
found their rhythm and won 7 of their next 10 games. Halfway
through the season, however, there was a three-way tie for second
place which included the Sun, the
Dream, and the
Mystics. The Sun, plagued by a
late-season injury to all-star
Asjha
Jones missed the playoffs for the first time since moving from
Miracle. Sun fans found an unwelcome
and unfamiliar ending to the
2009 season.
Current home
The
Connecticut Sun currently play in the Mohegan Sun Arena
. The arena is located at Mohegan Sun
Casino in Uncasville, Connecticut
. Compared to other arenas played at by teams
in the WNBA, Mohegan Sun Arena is small. The maximum capacity in
the entire arena (lower and upper levels) for a basketball game is
9,518. The Suns play in the smallest market of any WNBA team, and
one of the smallest markets of any professional sports team in the
United States.
The Mohegan Sun Arena is located in the middle of the mall area of
the Mohegan Sun Casino. Due to this placement, Sun fans take
advantage of the restaurants and shops in the casino before and
after games. Frequently, Sun and opposing players can be found
eating in restaurants after games. Opposing teams stay in the hotel
at the casino and are often seen walking from the arena to the
lobby.
All members of the Sun organization are considered employees of the
casino and as such are unable to partake in any of the games of
chance offered there.
Uniforms

- 2008 - Present: For home games, white with word "Connecticut"
printed vertically on the sides and Sun logo text on the chest. For
away games, blue with word "Sun" printed vertically on the sides
and gold "Connecticut" text on the chest. The Sun logo is on the
shorts.
- 2007: For home games, white with images of basic suns on the
sides and Sun logo text on the chest. For away games, blue with
images of basic suns on the sides and gold Sun logo text on the
chest. The Sun logo is on the shorts.
- 2004 - 2006: For home games, white with sun red on the sides
and red Sun logo text on the chest. For away games, blue with sun
red with gold trim on the sides and gold Sun logo text on the
chest. The Sun logo is on the shorts.
- 2003: For home games, white with sun red on the sides and red
Sun logo text on the chest. For away games, pure red with gold trim
on the sides and gold Sun logo text on the chest. The Sun logo is
on the shorts.
- 1999 - 2002: For home games, white with blue on the sides and
shoulders and white Miracle logo text on the chest. For away games,
blue with white on the sides and white Miracle logo text on the
chest. The Miracle logo is on the shorts.
Season-by-season records
| Season |
Team |
Conference |
Regular
season |
Playoff Results |
| W |
L |
PCT |
| Orlando
Miracle |
| 1999 |
1999 |
East |
4th |
15 |
17 |
.469 |
|
| 2000 |
2000 |
East |
3rd |
16 |
16 |
.500 |
Lost Conference Semifinals (Cleveland, 1–2) |
| 2001 |
2001 |
East |
5th |
13 |
19 |
.406 |
|
| 2002 |
2002 |
East |
5th |
16 |
16 |
.500 |
|
| Connecticut Sun |
| 2003 |
2003 |
East |
3rd |
18 |
16 |
.529 |
Won Conference Semifinals (Charlotte, 2–0)
Lost Conference Finals (Detroit, 0–2)
|
| 2004 |
2004 |
East |
1st |
18 |
16 |
.529 |
Won Conference Semifinals (Washington, 2–1)
Won Conference Finals (New York, 2–0)
Lost WNBA Finals (Seattle, 1-2)
|
| 2005 |
2005 |
East |
1st |
26 |
8 |
.765 |
Won Conference Semifinals (Detroit, 2–0)
Won Conference Finals (Indiana, 2–0)
Lost WNBA Finals (Sacramento, 1-3)
|
| 2006 |
2006 |
East |
1st |
26 |
8 |
.765 |
Won Conference Semifinals (Washington, 2–0)
Lost Conference Finals (Detroit, 1–2)
|
| 2007 |
2007 |
East |
3rd |
18 |
16 |
.529 |
Lost Conference Semifinals (Indiana, 1–2) |
| 2008 |
2008 |
East |
2nd |
21 |
13 |
.618 |
Lost Conference Semifinals (New York, 1-2) |
| 2009 |
2009 |
East |
6th |
16 |
18 |
.471 |
|
| Regular season |
203 |
163 |
.555 |
2 Conference Championships |
| Playoffs |
18 |
16 |
.529 |
0 WNBA
Championships |
Players
Current roster
Former players
Coaches and staff
Head coaches
|
Connecticut Sun head coaches |
| Name |
Start |
End |
Seasons |
Regular season |
Playoffs |
| W |
L |
PCT |
G |
W |
L |
PCT |
G |
| Carolyn Peck |
July 6, 1998 |
April 3, 2002 |
4 |
44 |
52 |
.458 |
96 |
1 |
2 |
.333 |
3 |
| Dee
Brown |
April 5, 2002 |
End of 2002 |
1 |
16 |
16 |
.500 |
32 |
0 |
0 |
.000 |
0 |
| Mike
Thibault |
March 7, 2003 |
Incumbent |
7 |
143 |
95 |
.601 |
238 |
17 |
14 |
.548 |
31 |
|
General managers
Assistant coaches
Media coverage
Currently, select Connecticut Sun games are
broadcast on WCTX
(MyTV9). More often than not,
NBA TV
will pick up the feed from the local broadcast. These games are
shown nationally (via
NBA TV). Broadcasters
for Connecticut Sun games on WCTX include:
Bob Heussler,
Mike
Gorman,
Rebecca Lobo, Leah Secondo,
and
Kara Wolters. The Connecticut Sun
have reached a multi-year agreement with WCTX.
All games that are broadcast on local television (be it WCTX or the
opponent's station) are available for live online viewing from
WNBA.com.
Home game radio broadcasts are done by
Bob
Heussler on
WMOS (The Wolf, 102.3).
Some games are also broadcast nationally on
ESPN,
ESPN2, and
ABC. The
WNBA has reached an
eight year agreement with
ESPN which will pay
rights fees to the Sun and the other teams in the league.
All-time notes
Regular season attendance
| Regular
Season All-Time Attendance |
| Orlando Miracle |
| Year |
Average: Home |
Average: Away |
High |
Low |
Sellouts |
Total for Year |
WNBA Game Average |
| 1999 |
9,801 (6th) |
10,889 |
15,442 |
7,028 |
0 |
156,818 |
10,207 |
| 2000 |
7,363 (11th) |
8,885 |
9,464 |
5,731 |
0 |
117,810 |
9,074 |
| 2001 |
7,430 (11th) |
8,560 |
11,903 |
5,363 |
0 |
118,874 |
9,105 |
| 2002 |
7,115 (13th) |
9,433 |
13,111 |
4,323 |
0 |
113,837 |
9,228 |
| Connecticut Sun |
| Year |
Average: Home |
Average: Away |
High |
Low |
Sellouts |
Total for Year |
WNBA Game Average |
| 2003 |
6,025 (14th) |
8,841 (4th) |
9,518 |
4,038 |
2 |
102,433 |
8,826 |
| 2004 |
6,635 (13th) |
8,627 (8th) |
9,518 |
3,846 |
2 |
112,803 |
8,589 |
| 2005 |
7,156 (10th) |
9,137 (2nd) |
9,518 |
5,596 |
2 |
121,644 |
8,172 |
| 2006 |
7,417 (9th) |
7,250 (8th) |
9,518 |
6,019 |
2 |
126,096 |
7,476 |
| 2007 |
7,970 (7th) |
7,551 (9th) |
9,518 |
6,154 |
1 |
135,490 |
7,739 |
| 2008 |
7,644 (11th) |
7,132 (14th) |
9,518 |
5,245 |
3 |
129,951 |
7,948 |
| 2009 |
6,794 (12th) |
7,361 (11th) |
9,047 |
5,675 |
0 |
115,496 |
8,029 |
|
Franchise leaders
- Games Played: Nykesha Sales (278)
- Consecutive Games Played: Nykesha Sales (248,
6/10/99-7/6/06)
- Minutes: Nykesha Sales (8,762)
- Minutes Per Game: Shannon Johnson (34.0)
- Points: Nykesha Sales (3,955)
- Points Per Game: Nykesha Sales (14.3)
- Consecutive Games Scoring: Taj McWilliams
Franklin (243, 6/10/99-8/13/06)
- Field Goal % (minimum 100): Margo Dydek
(462-1,032: .503)
- Three Point % (minimum 50): Jamie Carey
(84-207: .406)
- Free Throw % (minimum 100): Lindsay Whalen
(576-717: .803)
- Rebounds: Taj McWilliams-Franklin (1,814)
- Rebounds Per Game: Taj McWilliams-Franklin
(7.5)
- Assists: Lindsay Whalen (808)
- Assists Per Game: Lindsay Whalen (5.0)
- Steals: Nykesha Sales (490)
- Steals Per Game: Nykesha Sales (1.76)
- Blocks: Taj McWilliams-Franklin (267)
- Blocks Per Game: Margo Dydek (2.26)
- Personal Fouls: Nykesha Sales (798)
- Turnovers: Nykesha Sales (578)
Draft picks
- 1999 Expansion Draft: Andrea Congreaves (2),
Kisha Ford (4), Yolanda Moore (6), Adrienne Johnson (8)
- 1999: Tari Phillips (8), Sheri Sam (20), Taj
McWilliams-Franklin (32), Carla McGhee (44), Elaine Powell
(50)
- 2000: Cintia dos Santos (4), Jannon Roland
(20), Shawnetta Stewart (36), Romona Hanzova (52)
- 2001: Katie Douglas (10), Brooke Wyckoff (26),
Jaclyn Johnson (42), Anne Thorius (58)
- 2002: Davalyn Cunningham (23), Saundra Jackson
(39), Tomeka Brown (55)
- 2003 Miami Sol/Portland Fire Dispersal Draft: Debbie
Black (6)
- 2003: Courtney Coleman (13), Lindsey Wilson
(34)
- 2004 Cleveland Rockers
Dispersal Draft: selection traded
- 2004: Lindsay Whalen (4), Jessica Brungo (16),
Ugo Oha (24), Candace Futrell (29)
- 2005: Katie Feenstra (8), Erin Phillips (21),
Megan Mahoney (34)
- 2006: Debbie Merrill (28), Marita Payne
(42)
- 2007 Charlotte Sting
Dispersal Draft: selection waived
- 2007: Kamesha Hairston (12), Sandrine Gruda
(13), Cori Chambers (26), Kiera Hardy (39)
- 2008: Amber Holt (9), Ketia Swanier (12),
Jolene Anderson (23), Lauren Ervin (37)
- 2009 Houston Comets
Dispersal Draft: selection waived
- 2009: Chante Black (10), Lyndra Littles (17),
Alba Torrens (26)
Trades
- April 18, 2002: The Miracle acquire Clarisse
Machanguana from the Charlotte Sting for the Miracle's first-round
pick in the 2002 WNBA Draft.
- July 8, 2002: The Miracle acquire Wendy Palmer
from the Detroit Shock for Elaine Powell.
- February 14, 2003: The Sun acquire Rebecca
Lobo from the Houston Comets for the Sun's second round pick in the
2003 WNBA Draft.
- January 6, 2004: The Sun trade four-time WNBA
All Star point guard Shannon Johnson along with their second- and
third-round picks in the 2004 WNBA Draft to the San Antonio Silver
Stars for the Stars' first-, second-, and third-round picks. The
Sun used the 4th pick to select Lindsay Whalen.
- March 25, 2004: The Sun acquire Asjha Jones
from the Washington Mystics for the eighth pick in the 2004 WNBA
Draft in a three-way trade that also involves the Phoenix
Mercury.
- April 16, 2005: The Sun acquire Margo Dydek
from the San Antonio Silver Stars in exchange for Katie Feenstra
and the Sun's first-round pick in the 2006 WNBA Draft.
- February 21, 2007: The Sun trade five-time All
Star Taj McWilliams-Franklin to the Los Angeles Sparks in exchange
for Erika DeSouza and the Sparks' first-round pick in the 2007 WNBA
Draft.
- February 19, 2008: The Sun trade Katie Douglas
to the Indiana Fever for Tamika Whitmore, the rights to guard
Jessica Foley and the Fever's first-round pick in the 2008 WNBA
Draft.
- March 6, 2008: The Sun trade Megan Mahoney to
the Houston Comets for Barbara Turner.
- March 14, 2008: The Sun trade Kristen
Rasmussen to the Minnesota Lynx in exchange for Tamika Raymond as
well as the option to trade second-round picks in the 2009 WNBA
Draft.
All-Stars
- 1999: Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Shannon
Johnson, Nykesha Sales
- 2000: Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Shannon
Johnson, Nykesha Sales
- 2001: Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Nykesha
Sales
- 2002: Shannon Johnson, Nykesha Sales
- 2003: Shannon Johnson, Nykesha Sales
- 2004: Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Nykesha Sales,
Lindsay Whalen
- 2005: Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Nykesha
Sales
- 2006: Katie Douglas, Margo Dydek, Taj
McWilliams-Franklin, Nykesha Sales, Lindsay Whalen
- 2007: Katie Douglas, Asjha Jones
- 2008: No All-Star Game
- 2009: Asjha Jones
Honors and awards
- 2004 Most Improved Player: Wendy
Palmer-Daniel
- 2005 All-Defensive First Team Member:
Katie Douglas
- 2006 All-Star Game MVP: Katie
Douglas
- 2006 Coach of the Year: Mike
Thibault
- 2006 All-Defensive First Team Member:
Katie Douglas
- 2007 All-Defensive First Team Member:
Katie Douglas
- 2008 Coach of the Year: Mike
Thibault
- 2008 Peak Performer (Assists):
Lindsay Whalen
- 2008 All-WNBA First Team Member:
Lindsay Whalen
- 2008 All-WNBA Second Team Member:
Asjha Jones
- 2008 All-Rookie Team Member: Amber
Holt
References
External links