The WNBA’s explosion in popularity has just hit another historic milestone. Still in its opening month, the league is already breaking viewership records. And quite fittingly, the latest one arrived through a heavyweight showdown between two of the sport’s most compelling figures: A’ja Wilson and Angel Reese.
Sunday’s clash between the Las Vegas Aces and Atlanta Dream officially became the most-watched WNBA Sunday game ever broadcast in the month of May, averaging 1.24 million viewers across NBC and Peacock. With Wilson and Reese sharing the same floor, the record-setting audience was hardly a surprise. But the significance of the number goes well beyond just two star names drawing eyeballs, especially since, Reese did not have a good game by any measure.
The context matters here. May is traditionally a lower-viewership month for basketball outside of playoff action, and Sunday broadcast slots face their own unique competitive challenges from other programming. Setting a viewership record specifically within that window is quite impressive. It signals that the WNBA‘s baseline audience has risen dramatically, even for games that aren’t being treated as marquee events by the broader sports calendar.
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Perhaps even more telling is what this game was not. Historically, the biggest spikes in WNBA television ratings have been heavily tied to Indiana Fever games featuring Caitlin Clark. Non-Fever matchups have typically drawn significantly smaller audiences by comparison. The fact that a game without Clark or the Fever pulled 1.24 million viewers is a powerful indicator that general basketball fans are now tuning in for the league’s competitive product across the board, not just for one player or one team.
And the game itself delivered everything those viewers could have hoped for. For the first three quarters, the defending champion Las Vegas Aces were in full control. WIth A’ja Wilson, Chennedy Carter, and Chelsea Gray contributing at leaset 20 points, they built a commanding 19-point lead in the second half that appeared to have the contest firmly in hand. But playing in front of a sold-out State Farm Arena crowd of over 17,000 fans, the Atlanta Dream had other ideas. They launched a furious fourth-quarter rally that turned the night into something genuinely special.
Led by Allisha Gray’s 25 points and Te-Hina Paopao’s 19, Atlanta went on a staggering 16-0 scoring run that wiped the deficit away entirely. With just 36 seconds remaining, Jordin Canada converted a fast-break layup to give the Dream an 84-83 lead, their first advantage of the entire second half. What followed was a reminder of exactly why Chelsea Gray carries the nickname “Point Gawd.” With the Aces trailing by one and the clock draining, Gray drove into the lane and sank an impossibly contested fadeaway jumper with just 3.6 seconds remaining, putting Vegas back in front 85-84 and sending the arena into chaos.
The viewership record from this game is far from the only milestone the 2026 season has already produced. The WNBA Draft, which took place at the start of the season, also set its own landmark as the second-most watched in league history, averaging 1.5 million viewers on ESPN. The Dallas Wings versus Indiana Fever season opener also pulled in 2.49 million viewers on ABC, securing its place as the fourth-largest WNBA audience on record since 2000.
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Taken together, these numbers paint a picture of a league that is accelerating. The audience is broader, the casual viewer is engaging, and the games themselves are delivering the kind of drama that keeps people coming back. If the opening weeks of the 2026 season are any indication, the WNBA’s best days in terms of viewership and cultural relevance are not behind it. They are very much still ahead.
NBC Kickstarts Return to WNBA Coverage With Historic Viewership Milestone
The Las Vegas Aces-Atlanta Dream game was NBC’s first WNBA broadcast in 23 years. Prior to Sunday’s coverage, the network had not aired a single WNBA game since August 31, 2002. So this was genuinely a historic return to the sport. And kicking off that return with a record-setting viewership milestone is about as good a start as NBC Sports could have possibly scripted.
NBC’s history with the WNBA runs deep. The network was one of the league’s foundational television partners from the very beginning. They covered games from the inaugural 1997 season to the conclusion of the 2002 campaign before opting out. Now, more than two decades later, NBC Sports has returned through a massive 11-year media rights partnership that includes multiple regular-season games broadcast across the flagship NBC network, Peacock, and NBCSN. The deal also grants NBC Sports exclusive coverage of future WNBA Finals.
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Starting their return with a record-breaking audience is a powerful early signal that the billion-dollar investment is beginning to show the returns its backers were hoping for, especially given that NBC’s marketing choices in the lead-up to the season, including the WNBApromotional campaign that excluded Caitlin Clark, drew pointed criticism from fans and analysts alike. Whatever concerns existed about how the network would handle its reintroduction to women’s basketball, the viewership numbers from Sunday have now provided a convincing early answer. It worked.
In total, NBCUniversal will broadcast between 22 and 26 national games across its platforms this season. This include seven marquee Sunday games. Among the most anticipated are the Indiana Fever at Las Vegas Aces on July 12 and the Indiana Fever at Chicago Sky on August 23. With the standard that Sunday’s historic broadcast has already set, both of those matchups are definitely primed to generate their own record-chasing audiences.
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