According to the reports, the Connecticut Sun -owned group is exploring the sale of the team, news that came out earlier this week. In the midst of losing all its initial alignment of the 2024 season and its chief coach, Steph White, the Itelf team is in a reconstruction. There were questions about why a playoff team had so many problems with retaining his talent, and speculation immediately went to his team’s facilities.
Duration The Playoffs of 2024, it was revealed that the sun had expelled the leg of its practice gym because the space was interested in a small child’s birthday party. The team also does not have plans to build a dedicated practice installation for its players, since other franchises run to compete with each other in this regard. Only in the few years, Las Vegas Aces, Seattle Storm and Phoenix Mercury, among others, have built avant -garde facilities only for their WNBA teams.
With the growing pressure to keep up with the trends in the recovery and women’s sports investment, it was revealed that the Mohegan tribe, which the sun has, has chosen to explore a sale, which leaves open the possibility that the team is relocated to Connecticut by one of the cities that lose the wave expansion offers or current league.
The options for relocation include going to Boston, since the team has already exhausted multiple games of special events in the city. Other cities such as Philadelphia, Nashville, Cleveland, Denver, Charlotte and Houston have also been linked to possible expansion teams.
Apparently, that caused panic among dedicated female basketball fans in the state, which has a rich history with sport. They were and bought all seasonal tickets for The Sun, a first franchise.
News:
Connecticut Sun official sold his memberships in the seasonal ticket for the 2025 season.
It is the first time in the history of the franchise that happened.
– Meghan L. Hall (@itsmeghanlhall) May 14, 2025
In a state that, home to the “World Basketball Capital”, the University of Connecticut, there is a lot of love for female basketball. This trouble to sell seasonal tickets seems a direct result of the news of a potential sale. Even so, if it is an admirable effort of fans to keep their team, it seems unlikely to change the result of this last impulse to sell the franchise.
But for now, things are usual in Connecticut, since the team prepares for its opening home on Sunday, May 18.