2023 WNBA draft

The 2023 WNBA Draft, the WNBA's draft for the 2023 WNBA season, will be held in the spring of 2023 following the 2022–23 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The draft will be the 28th in WNBA history. On February 23, 2023, it was announced that the 2023 draft would take place at Spring Studios New York on April 10, 2023. It will also be exclusively televised on ESPN.[1]

2023 WNBA Draft
General information
SportBasketball
Date(s)April 10, 2023
LocationSpring Studios New York
Manhattan, New York City
Network(s)ESPN
Overview
LeagueWNBA
Teams12

Draft lottery

The lottery selection to determine the order of the top four picks in the 2023 draft took place on November 11, 2022, and was televised on ESPN leading into ESPN's women’s college basketball game that evening featuring defending National Champion South Carolina at Maryland.[2] The four non-playoff teams in 2022 qualified from the lottery drawing: Indiana Fever, Atlanta Dream, Los Angeles Sparks, and the Minnesota Lynx. The Sparks made a trade in February 2022 that allowed their pick to ultimately end up with the Washington Mystics at the time of the drawing. Each team had a representative at the lottery drawing - Kelsey Mitchell for the Fever, Head Coach Tanisha Wright for the Dream, Natasha Cloud for the Mystics, and Napheesa Collier for the Lynx. The Fever won the lottery for the first time in franchise history and were awarded the top pick in the draft. The rest of the order went as the following: Lynx, Dream, and Mystics.[3]

Lottery chances

Team Combined 2021–2022 record Lottery chances (out of 1,000)
Indiana Fever 11–57 442
Atlanta Dream 22–46 276
Washington Mystics (via the Los Angeles Sparks) 25–43 178
Minnesota Lynx 36–32 104

The lottery odds were based on combined records from the 2021 and 2022 WNBA seasons. In the drawing, 14 balls numbered 1–14 are placed in a lottery machine and mixed. Four balls are drawn to determine a four-digit combination (only 11–12–13–14 is ignored and redrawn). The team to which that four-ball combination is assigned receives the No. 1 pick. The four balls are then placed back into the machine and the process is repeated to determine the second pick. The two teams whose numerical combinations do not come up in the lottery will select in the inverse order of their two-year cumulative record. Ernst & Young knows the discreet results before they are announced.[4]

The order of selection for the remainder of the first round as well as the second and third rounds was determined by inverse order of the teams' respective regular-season records solely from 2022.

Eligibility

Under the current collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the WNBA and its players' union, draft eligibility for players not defined as "international" requires the following to be true:[5]

  • The player's 22nd birthday falls during the calendar year of the draft. For this draft, the cutoff birth date is December 31, 2001.
  • She has either:
    • completed her college eligibility;
    • received a bachelor's degree, or is scheduled to receive such in the 3 months following the draft; or
    • is at least 4 years removed from high school graduation.

A player who is scheduled to receive her bachelor's degree within 3 months of the draft date, and is younger than the cutoff age, is only eligible if the calendar year of the draft is no earlier than the fourth after her high school graduation.

Players with remaining college eligibility who meet the cutoff age must notify the WNBA headquarters of their intent to enter the draft no later than 10 days before the draft date, and must renounce any remaining college eligibility to do so. A separate notification timetable is provided for players involved in postseason tournaments (most notably the NCAA Division I tournament); those players (normally) must declare for the draft within 24 hours of their final game.

"International players" are defined as those for whom all of the following is true:

  • Born and currently residing outside the U.S.
  • Never "exercised intercollegiate basketball eligibility" in the U.S.

For "international players", the eligibility age is 20, also measured on December 31 of the year of the draft.

Key

+ Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game
Bold Denotes player who won Rookie of the Year

Draft

First round

Pick Player Nationality Team School / club team
1 Indiana Fever
2 Minnesota Lynx
3 Dallas Wings (from Atlanta)[lower-alpha 1]
4 Washington Mystics (from Los Angeles via Atlanta)[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3]
5 Dallas Wings (from Phoenix via Chicago)[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5]
6 Atlanta Dream (from New York via Connecticut)[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 7]
7 Indiana Fever (from Dallas)[lower-alpha 8]
8 Atlanta Dream (from Washington)[lower-alpha 3]
9 Seattle Storm
10 Los Angeles Sparks (from Connecticut)[lower-alpha 9]
11 Dallas Wings (from Chicago via Indiana)[lower-alpha 8]
12 Minnesota Lynx (from Las Vegas)[lower-alpha 10]

Second round

Pick Player Nationality Team School / club team
13 Indiana Fever
14 Los Angeles Sparks
15 Atlanta Dream
16 Minnesota Lynx
17 Indiana Fever (from Phoenix)[lower-alpha 4]
18 Seattle Storm (from New York)[lower-alpha 11]
19 Dallas Wings
20 Washington Mystics
21 Seattle Storm
22 Connecticut Sun
23 Chicago Sky
24 Minnesota Lynx (from Las Vegas)[lower-alpha 10]

Third round

Pick Player Nationality Team School / club team
25 Indiana Fever
26 Los Angeles Sparks
27 Phoenix Mercury (from Atlanta)[lower-alpha 12]
28 Minnesota Lynx
29 Phoenix Mercury
30 New York Liberty
31 Dallas Wings
32 Washington Mystics
33 Seattle Storm
34 Connecticut Sun
35 Chicago Sky
36 Las Vegas Aces

Footnotes

  1. January 21, 2023: Atlanta to Dallas[6]
    • Atlanta acquired Allisha Gray
    • Dallas acquired 2023 and 2025 first-round picks
  2. February 5, 2022: Los Angeles to Atlanta[7]
  3. April 6, 2022: Atlanta to Washington[8]
    • Atlanta acquired 2022 (1st overall) and 2023 first-round picks
    • Washington acquired 2022 first- and second-round picks (3rd and 14th overall), and option to swap its own 2023 first-round pick with the 2023 first-round pick Atlanta acquired from Los Angeles
  4. February 3, 2022: Three-team trade among Chicago, Indiana, and Phoenix[9]
    • Chicago acquired Julie Allemand from Indiana and a 2023 first-round pick from Phoenix
    • Indiana acquired Bria Hartley, 2022 first-round pick from Chicago, 2022 and 2023 second-round picks from Phoenix
    • Phoenix acquired Diamond DeShields
  5. February 11, 2023: Four-team trade among Chicago, Dallas, New York, and Phoenix[10]
    • Chicago acquired Marina Mabrey and a 2024 second-round pick (from Phoenix)
    • New York acquired rights to Leonie Fiebich, a 2024 second-round pick (from Chicago), and the right to swap 2025 first-round picks (from Phoenix)
    • Phoenix acquired Michaela Onyenwere, 2024 third-round pick (from Chicago), and 2025 second-round pick (from Chicago)
    • Dallas acquired Diamond DeShields, 2023 and 2024 first-round picks (from Chicago), and the right to swap 2025 first-round picks (from Chicago)
  6. January 16, 2023: Three-team trade among New York, Connecticut, and Dallas[11]
  7. February 9, 2023: Connecticut to Atlanta[12]
    • Connecticut acquired rights to Tiffany Hayes
    • Atlanta acquired a 2023 first-round pick (6th overall)
  8. March 8, 2022: Indiana to Dallas[13]
    • Indiana acquired two 2022 first-round picks (4th and 6th) and a 2023 first-round pick
    • Dallas acquired Teaira McCowan, a 2022 first-round pick, and Chicago's 2023 first-round pick
  9. January 16, 2023: Connecticut to Los Angeles[14]
  10. April 10, 2022: Las Vegas to Minnesota[15]
    • Vegas acquired a 2022 first- and second-round picks (8th and 13th overall)
    • Minnesota acquired 2023 first- and second-round picks
  11. April 11, 2022: New York to Seattle[16]
    • New York acquired Lorela Cubaj
    • Seattle acquired a 2023 second-round pick
  12. January 31, 2022: Atlanta to Phoenix[17]
    • Atlanta acquired Kia Vaughn
    • Phoenix acquired a 2023 third-round pick

References

  1. "WNBA Draft 2023 Presented By State Farm® To Be Held On April 10th". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  2. "WNBA Draft Lottery 2023 Presented By State Farm To Take Place Friday, NOV. 11". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  3. Philippou, Alexa. "Indiana Fever earn No. 1 pick in 2023 WNBA draft for first time". ESPN.com. ESPN. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  4. "Napheesa Collier to Represent Minnesota Lynx at WNBA Draft Lottery 2023 Presented by State Farm". Minnesota Lynx. WNBA. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  5. "Article XIII, Section 1: Player Eligibility" (PDF). 2020 Women's National Basketball Association Collective Bargaining Agreement. Women's National Basketball Players Association. pp. 110–111. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  6. "Atlanta Dream Land Allisha Gray". dream.wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  7. "Dream Acquire Erica Wheeler, 2023 First Round Pick and 2022 Second Round Pick in Trade with Sparks". WNBA. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  8. "Dream Lands 2022 Number One Overall Draft Pick". WNBA. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  9. "Mercury, Fever & Sky Complete Three-Team Trade". WNBA.com. March 3, 2022. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  10. "Chicago Sky Acquires Marina Mabrey in Four-Team Trade". WNBA.com. February 12, 2023. Retrieved February 12, 2023.
  11. "Connecticut Sun Acquire Rebecca Allen, Tyasha Harris and the No. 6 Pick in a Three-Team Trade". Connecticut Sun. WNBA. Retrieved January 17, 2023.
  12. "Connecticut Sun Acquire Rights to Tiffany Hayes". Connecticut Sun. WNBA. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  13. "Fever Acquire Draft Picks in Trade with Dallas Wings". WNBA. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  14. "Sparks Acquire Guard Jasmine Thomas". sparks.wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  15. "Aces Acquire No. 8 and 13 picks from Minnesota". WNBA. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  16. "New York Liberty Select Nyara Sabally, Lorela Cubaj and Sika Kone in 2022 WNBA Draft". WNBA. April 11, 2022. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  17. Atlanta Dream PR [@ATLDreamPR] (January 31, 2022). "Transaction: Atlanta acquires Kia Vaughn in a trade with Phoenix in exchange for a 2023 third round draft pick" (Tweet). Retrieved November 13, 2022 via Twitter.
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