The WNBA approved the Connecticut Sun's relocation to Houston following the 2026 season, ending a 27-year run in the Northeast and completing the league's geographic repositioning around three expansion franchises. The unanimous vote closes the Sun's tenure in Uncasville, Connecticut, where the franchise moved in 2003 after four seasons as the Orlando Miracle. Houston becomes the league's 15th market, the first Texas presence since the Comets folded in 2008.
The move follows Golden State's 2025 launch, Toronto's 2026 entry, and Portland's 2027 expansion. Connecticut was the last unresolved piece in Commissioner Cathy Engelbert's three-year footprint overhaul. The Sun played in Mohegan Sun Arena, a 10,000-seat casino venue owned by the Mohegan Tribe, which also owned the franchise until the sale. Terms were not disclosed, but comparable WNBA transactions—Golden State at $50 million, Toronto at $115 million—suggest Houston's purchase price landed between those markers, contingent on venue commitments.
The Sun's departure removes the league's smallest television market (Hartford-New Haven ranks 33rd nationally) and opens Houston, the fifth-largest metro, where the Comets won the league's first four championships before shuttering mid-financial crisis. Houston already hosts NCAA women's tournaments and draws 12,000-plus for college games at Toyota Center, the Rockets' arena, which is the assumed landing spot. No venue announcement accompanied league approval, but the Rockets' ownership group, Tilman Fertitta's empire, has not commented on a WNBA partnership. That silence is notable; if Fertitta were involved, the press release would have said so.
For sponsors, Connecticut's exit closes a market where local casino money and insurance firms (Aetna, Travelers) provided mid-tier WNBA inventory. Houston opens Fortune 500 density—energy, healthcare, aerospace—where national brands like Shell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and MD Anderson compete for women's sports adjacency. The Sun's jersey patch, currently Mohegan Sun's own brand, becomes available. Expect bidding in the $2-3 million annual range, double Connecticut's economics. Kit sponsors and apparel deals reset when the franchise rebrands, likely in late 2026.
The Sun's 2026 season becomes a lame-duck year. Season-ticket renewals in Connecticut will collapse; the franchise will play out the string in front of 6,000-7,000 instead of the usual 8,500. Players under contract beyond 2026—including probable All-Star forward DeWanna Bonner, who has one more year—face relocation clauses or trades. Coaching staff, led by Stephanie White, will either move or scatter to other benches. The Sun's front office, based in Uncasville, will shrink to skeleton crew by mid-2026. Meanwhile, Houston hires a GM and begins the infrastructure build.
The Comets' legacy complicates branding. The franchise name and trophies belong to the league, unused since 2008. The new ownership could revive "Comets" or start fresh. Either way, the Houston market remembers Cynthia Cooper, Sheryl Swoopes, Tina Thompson—three of the league's first 10 all-time greats. Nostalgia is marketing capital, but it also invites unfavorable comparisons. A new name avoids that weight.
Watch the arena deal. If Houston lands in Toyota Center, the franchise shares scheduling with the Rockets, WWE events, and rodeo season, limiting prime dates. A downtown venue seats 18,000 for basketball, but WNBA curtains reduce capacity to 10,000-12,000, creating artificial scarcity that drives ticket pricing. If the ownership group builds a dedicated arena—Sacramento's $50 million retrofit model—expect a suburban site with better parking and lower construction costs. That decision shapes season-ticket economics and local broadcast angles.
The Sun's player-development pipeline also relocates. Connecticut drafted well but rarely retained stars past their first contracts; the market could not compete with New York, Los Angeles, or Phoenix for endorsement upside. Houston offers the fourth-largest media market, Nike and Adidas presences, and proximity to Dallas (another potential WNBA expansion candidate post-2027). Player agents will prefer Houston over Uncasville in free agency, which matters when the league's salary cap remains capped at $1.46 million per team and max contracts at $250,000.
The 2026 WNBA draft precedes Connecticut's final season. The Sun hold a mid-first-round pick, currently projected as the 7th selection. That asset becomes Houston's first draft pick, a symbolic handoff. The franchise's six playoff appearances in the last eight years end, but the roster does not transfer intact—free agency and trades will reshape the team before Houston's 2027 tip-off.
Houston's ownership group has not yet been named publicly, which suggests either a consortium finalizing structure or a single buyer preferring quiet until the arena deal closes. The league's approval came 48 hours after the Toronto expansion launched, indicating the Sun sale was held until other announcements cleared. Expect ownership reveal within two weeks, tied to a venue press conference. The Comets' old practice facility, on the city's west side, was demolished in 2015; the new franchise will need separate real estate for training and offices.