The WNBA’s Worst Team Was Just Named Its Most Valuable After A $100M Surge

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The Dallas Wings currently sit dead last in the WNBA standings with a brutal 6-19 record.

The team boasts superstar Arike Ogunbowale as well as fellow stars Odyssey Sims and Natasha Howard, but its league-worst 89.7 points per game allowed have led to a brutal star to the season.

Despite that, however, the Wings are currently the league’s most valuable franchise according to Sports Business Journal. Dallas is currently valued at a league-high $208 million, that’s over a $100 million jump from what Sportico valued it at in the Spring.

So, why the massive jump for a team that has had little-to-no on-court success?

Thank new minority owners Jed Kaplan and Randy Eisenman, who each recently purchased just a half-percent of the team for $1.04 million from team CEO and part-owner Greg Bibb.

“I would say the value of anything is what the market’s willing to pay,” Bibb told SBJ. “I can make a compelling case for why that $208 million number is justifiable.

“Certainly, we’re not talking about a business that’s stagnating … it’s quite the opposite. What we are doing today is going to be significantly outpaced by what we do tomorrow.”

Sportico valued the Wings at just $75 million earlier this year. That ranked 11th out of the 12 teams in the WNBA

But in addition to new ownership, the franchise received a new investment from the city as well.

Dallas offered the team a $19M cash incentive to become the primary tenant of a renovated downtown Memorial Auditorium. The new arena is set to open in 2026 and has a capacity of 8,500 people. Bibb is also working with the city on a new practice facility. He claims the facility will rival the new Las Vegas Aces and Phoenix Mercury facilities.

The WNBA also recently agreed to a new $2.2 billion media rights deal and is set to expand to both the Bay Area and Toronto in the coming years.

So it’s clearly a good time to be a fan of women’s basketball.

Clay Sauertieg BroBible avatar and headshot
Clay Sauertieg is an editor with an expertise in College Football and Motorsports. He graduated from Penn State University and the Curley Center for Sports Journalism with a degree in Print Journalism.