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Las Vegas Aces

The Las Vegas Aces are an American professional basketball team based in the Las Vegas metropolitan area. The Aces compete in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) as a member club of the league's Western Conference. The team plays their home games at Michelob Ultra Arena in the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, and is headquartered in Henderson, Nevada. The Aces won the 2022 WNBA Commissioner's Cup and WNBA Championship. The Aces also won the 2023 WNBA Championship, becoming the first team to win back-to-back championships since 2001-2002, when the Los Angeles Sparks completed that feat.

This article is about the WNBA team. For the American Basketball Association team, see Las Vegas Aces (ABA).

Las Vegas Aces

1997

Utah Starzz
1997–2002
San Antonio Silver Stars
2003–2013
San Antonio Stars
2014–2017
Las Vegas Aces
2018–present

Black, silver, white[1]
     

Mark & Carol Davis (majority)
Tom Brady (minority)[3][4]

2 (2022, 2023)

1 (2022)

1 (25)

The team was founded in Salt Lake City, Utah, as the Utah Starzz before the league's inaugural 1997 season. It then moved to San Antonio, Texas before the 2003 season and became the San Antonio Silver Stars, later shortened to the San Antonio Stars in 2014.[5] The team relocated to Las Vegas before the 2018 season. The Aces, who are owned by Mark and Carol Davis, the current owners of the NFL's Las Vegas Raiders, and Tom Brady, are one of three WNBA franchises who compete in a market that lacks a current NBA team; the other two teams are the Connecticut Sun and the Seattle Storm.


As the Stars, the team qualified for the WNBA Playoffs in seven of their fifteen years in San Antonio. The franchise has been home to many high-quality players such as all-star point guard Becky Hammon, solid power-forward Sophia Young, former first-overall draft pick Ann Wauters, seven-foot-two-inch center Margo Dydek, two-time Sixth Woman of the Year Dearica Hamby, and two-time league MVP A'ja Wilson. The franchise has gone to the WNBA Finals four times: first in 2008, losing to Detroit, in 2020 losing to Seattle, and in 2022 winning against Connecticut, and in 2023 winning against New York.

(2011–2015)

Danielle Adams

(2005–2007)

Chantelle Anderson

(2010–2016)

Jayne Appel

(2000–2003)

Jennifer Azzi

(1997–1999)

Elena Baranova

Emma Cannon

(2007–2010)

Helen Darling

(1998–2004)

Margo Dydek

(2005–2006)

Shyra Ely

(2019-2021)

Liz Cambage

(2001–2007)

Marie Ferdinand-Harris

(1999–2004)

Adrienne Goodson

(2015–2022), now a member of the Los Angeles Sparks

Dearica Hamby

(2007–2014), now head coach of the Las Vegas Aces

Becky Hammon

(1997–1998)

Dena Head

(2010)

Chamique Holdsclaw

(2004–2006)

Shannon "Pee Wee" Johnson

(2012–2014)

Shenise Johnson

(2006–2009), now an assistant coach for the Atlanta Dream

Vickie Johnson

(2014–2020), now a member of the Minnesota Lynx

Kayla McBride

(2013), now the head coach for the Old Dominion University women's basketball team

DeLisha Milton-Jones

(1997–1999, 2005)

Wendy Palmer-Daniel

(2011–2015)

Jia Perkins

(2007–2009)

Erin Buescher Perperoglou

(2022)

Theresa Plaisance

(2002–2004)

Semeka Randall

(2007–2011)

Ruth Riley

(2011–2016, 2020), now a member of the Indiana Fever

Danielle Robinson

(2019–2020), now an assistant coach for William & Mary Tribe women's basketball

Sugar Rodgers

(1998–1999)

Olympia Scott

(2010)

Michelle Snow

(2000–2002)

Kate Starbird

(2004–2006)

LaToya Thomas

(2008–2009)

Ann Wauters

(1999–2002)

Natalie Williams

(2006–2015)

Sophia Young

(2006–2007, 2009)

Shanna Zolman

(2003)

Tausha Mills

owner of the Utah Jazz (1997–2002)

Larry H. Miller

owner of the San Antonio Spurs (2003–2017)

Peter Holt

(2017–2021)

MGM Resorts International

(2021–2023)

Mark Davis

Mark Davis and (2023–present)

Tom Brady

Media coverage[edit]

The television rights for the Aces are held by KVVU-TV, owned by Gray Television. A minimum of ten games air on KVVU, with the remaining games airing on Silver State Sports and Entertainment Network, a subchannel of KVVU. KVVU also broadcasts a 30-minute weekly show on the Aces.[20]


Some Aces games are broadcast nationally on ESPN, ESPN2, ABC, Ion Television, CBS and the CBS Sports Network.[21]


On radio, Aces games are broadcast locally on KWWN ESPN Las Vegas.[22]

A sellout for a basketball game at (Utah) is 19,911.

Delta Center

A sellout for a basketball game at (San Antonio) (2003–2014, 2016–2017) is 18,418.

AT&T Center

A sellout for a basketball game at (San Antonio) (2015) is 9,800.

Freeman Coliseum

A sellout for a basketball game at (Las Vegas) (2018–present) is 12,000.

Michelob Ultra Arena

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Official website