The WNBA Playoffs hit a two-decade high on cable Tuesday night.
The Connecticut Sun-New York Liberty game averaged 563,000 viewers on ESPN Tuesday, good for the most-watched playoff game on cable since 2001.
In the second half of the doubleheader, the Dallas Wings-Las Vegas Aces game averaged 522,000 viewers, the seventh-most-watched playoff game on cable since 2001.
These are pretty strong numbers for the league, especially since we’re not even at the WNBA Finals quite yet. These playoffs follow a season that saw national viewership for the league increase by 21%, including a 16-year high for the All-Star Game and the league’s most-watched regular season game on cable since 1999. The league also had a strong year in 2022, which was its most-watched on ESPN networks since 2008.
The WNBA Playoffs continue with a doubleheader on Friday, airing on ESPN2 and beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET. Game 4 of the Liberty-Sun series will at 3 p.m. ET on ABC, and if necessary, Game 4 of the Aces-Wings series will air at 9 p.m. ET Sunday on ESPN. If either series goes to a fifth game, it will be shunted over to ESPNU on Tuesday, October 3 due to the Wild Card round of the MLB Playoffs.
The WNBA Finals are scheduled to begin on Sunday, October 8 at 3 p.m. ET on ABC. Games 2, 4, and 5 (if necessary for the latter two) will air on ESPN, with Game 3 airing on ABC,
About Joe Lucia
I hate your favorite team. I also sort of hate most of my favorite teams.
Recent Posts
ESPN scorebug includes neat feature on NFL Network UFL broadcast
The ESPN scorebug on an NFL Network UFL telecast displayed which announcer was speaking throughout the game.
Jason Benetti delivers electric call in Tigers’ wild walk-off win
"OH MY GOODNESS! THIS DAY GETS NUTTIER!... IT WAS WELL WORTH THE WAIT!"
Patriots analyst Scott Zolak refuses to address Dianna Russini-Mike Vrabel situation
"It does me no good."
Local Networks
Brian Scalabrine on the NBA Playoffs and his SiriusXM show with Frank Isola
Paul O’Neill delivers top-notch announcer jinx before Mike Trout home run
"You've got 99 (mph) fastball, 94 (mph) slider, and [89-90 mph changeup]. I mean, it's, on paper, you shouldn't give up hits."
Baltimore Banner hires Washington Nationals reporter as D.C. sports expansion takes shape
The Baltimore Banner has hired Kyle Williams as its Washington Nationals reporter, part of the nonprofit's expansion into D.C. sports coverage