Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

WNBA takes Vegas stage

- By Mark Anderson AP writer W.G. Ramirez contribute­d to this report.

LAS VEGAS — The timing and location of the WNBA All-Star Game couldn’t be much better.

Just in the last week, 19-year-old phenom Victor Wembanyama made his NBA debut in the Summer League to sold-out crowds at the nearby Thomas & Mack Center, league commission­er Adam Silver spoke openly about Las Vegas as a potential expansion candidate, and the Aces continued to roll through opponents to move to 19-2 as they seek a second straight WNBA championsh­ip.

That’s a lot of basketball momentum ahead of the All-Star Game at Michelob Ultra Arena. The 3-point shooting contest and skills competitio­ns take place Friday, and the game Saturday has been declared a sellout.

Team Wilson is captained by Aces star and two-time MVP A’ja Wilson, and she will be joined by three of her teammates when they take on Team Stewart, led by 2018 MVP Breanna Stewart of the Liberty.

Aces coach Becky Hammon, who will lead Team Wilson, noted that Las Vegas has a history as a basketball city. UNLV won the 1990 national championsh­ip and appeared in three other Final Fours, making Runnin’ Rebels games must-see events even in this entertainm­ent-driven city.

“We just have the privilege and honor to be its first profession­al basketball team,” Hammon said. “But you go back to those early UNLV games, I think this town has always loved basketball . ... But to have a product like this, a women’s team like this, I think people are excited to come visit. I think we’ve played our way into the conversati­on of being one of the best shows here.”

Hammon spoke after Tuesday night’s 98-72 victory over the Mercury, which was played before a franchise-record crowd of 10,281 and was the team’s third sellout this season. Paul George, Donovan Mitchell and Bam Adebayo were among the NBA players watching, joined by former Duke and USA Basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski and Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas.

“The birth of Vegas sports outside of boxing has been amazing,” Thomas said. “It truly is becoming a hub of sports and entertainm­ent, and the WNBA and the Vegas Aces are driving that.”

The NBA could be next. Silver has often referred to Las Vegas as the “31st franchise” because of the presence of all 30 teams at the Summer League each year.

And that relationsh­ip is growing with the NBA playing the final four games of its first in-season tournament in Las Vegas on Dec. 7 and 9.

Silver, when addressing the Associated Press Sports Editors convention Monday in Las Vegas, didn’t tamp down speculatio­n of the city as a potential expansion candidate.

“We will look at this market,” Silver said. “There’s no doubt there is (also) enormous interest in Seattle.

“It’s not a secret.” For now, at least, the world’s best women’s players will call Vegas home for a couple of days, going through All-Star Game festivitie­s and trying to put on a show for the fans.

 ?? RYAN SUN/AP ?? Aces forward A’ja Wilson will serve as a team captain for the WNBA All-Star Game on Saturday in Las Vegas. The 3-point contest and skills challenge is Friday.
RYAN SUN/AP Aces forward A’ja Wilson will serve as a team captain for the WNBA All-Star Game on Saturday in Las Vegas. The 3-point contest and skills challenge is Friday.

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