WNBA Most Valuable Player

The Women's National Basketball Association Most Valuable Player (MVP) is an annual Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) award given since the league's inaugural season in 1997. MVP voting takes place immediately following the regular season. The award recipient is decided by a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters throughout the United States. Panel members were asked to select their top five choices for the award, with 10 points being awarded for a first place vote, seven for second, five for third, three for fourth and one for fifth.

In 2008, fans could also have a say in who won the award. Fans were able to vote online for their top five MVP picks. These selections accounted for 25% of the total vote, while the media panel's selections accounted for the other 75%.

A'ja Wilson has won the award the most times, with four; Sheryl Swoopes, Lisa Leslie and Lauren Jackson have each won three times. Two players have won the award with different franchises—Elena Delle Donne in 2015 with the Chicago Sky and 2019 with the Washington Mystics, and Breanna Stewart in 2018 with the Seattle Storm and 2023 with the New York Liberty. Cynthia Cooper and Candace Parker have also won the award twice.

Candace Parker in 2008 is the only player to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season.

Jackson, born and trained in Australia, is the only award winner trained outside the United States.

The sculptor of the WNBA MVP Award is Marc Mellon, who is also the sculptor of the NBA MVP Trophy.

Winners

Legend
Denotes player who is still active in the WNBA
* Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame
Denotes player whose team won championship that year
Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player has been named MVP
Team (X) Denotes the number of times a player from this team has won
Season Player Position Nationality Team First-Place Votes Ref.
1997 Cynthia Cooper * † Guard  United States Houston Comets 37 out of 37
1998 Cynthia Cooper * † (2) Houston Comets (2) 37 out of 45
1999 Yolanda Griffith * † Center Sacramento Monarchs 23 out of 51
2000 Sheryl Swoopes * † Guard / Forward Houston Comets (3) 38 out of 62
2001 Lisa Leslie * † Center Los Angeles Sparks 51 out of 60
2002 Sheryl Swoopes * † (2) Guard / Forward Houston Comets (4) 29 out of 60
2003 Lauren Jackson * † Forward / Center  Australia Seattle Storm 23 out of 54
2004 Lisa Leslie * † (2) Center  United States Los Angeles Sparks (2) 33 out of 48
2005 Sheryl Swoopes * † (3) Guard / Forward Houston Comets (5) 16 out of 50
2006 Lisa Leslie * † (3) Center Los Angeles Sparks (3) 40 out of 55
2007 Lauren Jackson * † (2) Forward / Center  Australia Seattle Storm (2) 42 out of 48
2008 Candace Parker Forward  United States Los Angeles Sparks (4) 276.79 out of 300 pts
2009 Diana Taurasi Guard Phoenix Mercury 27 out of 39
2010 Lauren Jackson * † (3) Forward / Center  Australia Seattle Storm (3) 22 out of 39
2011 Tamika Catchings * † Forward  United States Indiana Fever 21 out of 40
2012 Tina Charles Center Connecticut Sun 25 out of 41
2013 Candace Parker (2) Forward Los Angeles Sparks (5) 10 out of 39
2014 Maya Moore* † Minnesota Lynx 35 out of 38
2015 Elena Delle Donne Guard / Forward Chicago Sky 38 out of 39
2016 Nneka Ogwumike Forward Los Angeles Sparks (6) 31 out of 39
2017 Sylvia Fowles* Center Minnesota Lynx (2) 35 out of 40
2018 Breanna Stewart Forward Seattle Storm (4) 33 out of 39
2019 Elena Delle Donne (2) Guard / Forward Washington Mystics 41 out of 43
2020 A'ja Wilson Forward Las Vegas Aces 43 out of 47
2021 Jonquel Jones Forward / Center  Bahamas /  Bosnia and Herzegovina Connecticut Sun (2) 48 out of 49
2022 A'ja Wilson (2) Forward  United States Las Vegas Aces (2) 31 out of 56
2023 Breanna Stewart (2) New York Liberty 20 out of 60
2024 A'ja Wilson (3) Las Vegas Aces (3) 67 out of 67
2025 A'ja Wilson (4) Center Las Vegas Aces (4) 51 out of 72
  1. Second-place finisher, Lauren Jackson, received more first-place votes (20 to Swoopes' 16), but Swoopes earned 327 total points to Jackson's 325.
  2. First-place vote counts were not released by the WNBA. For the first time, an online fan vote was included in post-season award voting, accounting for 25% of the vote. The other 75% came from a panel of 45 national sportswriters and broadcasters.
  3. Parker and Maya Moore tied in first-place voting with 10 votes each. However in the overall vote tally, Parker earned 234 total points to Moore's 218.
  4. Second-place finisher, Alyssa Thomas, received more first-place votes (23 to Stewart's 20), but Stewart earned 446 total points to Thomas' 439.

Multi-time winners

Awards Player Team(s) Years
4 A'ja Wilson Las Vegas Aces 2020, 2022, 2024, 2025
3 Sheryl Swoopes Houston Comets 2000, 2002, 2005
Lisa Leslie Los Angeles Sparks 2001, 2004, 2006
Lauren Jackson Seattle Storm 2003, 2007, 2010
2 Cynthia Cooper Houston Comets 1997, 1998
Candace Parker Los Angeles Sparks 2008, 2013
Elena Delle Donne Chicago Sky / Washington Mystics 2015, 2019
Breanna Stewart Seattle Storm / New York Liberty 2018, 2023

Teams

Awards Teams Years
6 Los Angeles Sparks 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2013, 2016
5 Houston Comets 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2005
4 Seattle Storm 2003, 2007, 2010, 2018
Las Vegas Aces 2020, 2022, 2024, 2025
2 Minnesota Lynx 2014, 2017
Connecticut Sun 2012, 2021
1 Sacramento Monarchs 1999
Phoenix Mercury 2009
Indiana Fever 2011
Chicago Sky 2015
Washington Mystics 2019
New York Liberty 2023
0 Dallas Wings None
Atlanta Dream

See also

  • List of sports awards honoring women

wikipedia, wiki, encyclopedia, book, library, article, read, free download, Information about WNBA Most Valuable Player, What is WNBA Most Valuable Player? What does WNBA Most Valuable Player mean?