Friday, December 12, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

WNBA pre-season game heading to Edmonton with Canadian expansion team looming 

|
|

The WNBA is heading back to Canada on May 5th when the Los Angeles Sparks battle the Seattle Storm in Edmonton, while talks surrounding an expansion team in Toronto are heating up. 

The WNBA Canada Game 2024 will mark the second consecutive season that the league will be playing in Canada after the Chicago Sky and Minnesota Lynx faced off at a sold-out Scotiabank Arena last year. The game set records in attendance, broadcast viewership and merchandise sales in Canada. 

The same is expected this time around as Edmonton’s Rogers Place was sold out in eight minutes according to WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert, especially as Hamilton-native Kia Nurse will be featured in the matchup. 

“One of Canada’s greatest basketball players, Sparks guard Kia Nurse, is returning to play in front of her Canadian fans as my Los Angeles Sparks take on the Seattle Storm in this year’s WNBA Canada Game,” said Magic Johnson, Los Angeles Sparks co-owner, in a statement. “Showcasing some of the league’s top talent in Canada is a great opportunity to continue building dedicated WNBA fans outside of the U.S.” 

With the Canada Game 2024 being the fourth international game in WNBA history, after Monterrey (2004), Manchester (2011) and Toronto (2023) each hosted a pre-season game in the past, the league continues to build a fanbase abroad, leading to a WNBA franchise possibly coming to Toronto. 

Larry Tanenbaum, part-owner and chairman of MLSE, is pursuing a WNBA team in Toronto through his holding company, the Kilmer Group, according to CBC Sports’ Shireen Ahmed

Ahmed reports that Tanenbaum’s representatives are expected to meet with the WNBA to discuss the bidding process for a team, with a formal announcement as soon as May. 

The group is exploring Coca-Cola Coliseum, the home of the Toronto Marlies of the American Hockey League (AHL), as a possible venue for Toronto’s WNBA team, with aspirations of building a practice facility there that could be used by both the Canadian men’s and women’s national teams. 

However, if a team were to come to Toronto they likely wouldn’t begin play until at least the 2026 season. 

“I’ve always said I think about 18 months out is when you need to essentially finalize things because you have to start working on a brand, Nike has to start to produce uniforms, things like that,” said Engelbert in a conference call. “Any teams would begin in 2026 and beyond.” 

Golden State is the only expansion team beginning play in the 2025 season – the first expansion team since 2008 and the 13th WNBA franchise – costing a reported $53 million USD expansion fee. 

For more information on the WNBA, head to wnba.com. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

A Night with the Boys in Blue: Toronto Maple Leafs versus the Saint Louis Blues 

The platform for the Union Station Lakeshore West train is packed, with bodies bumping into bodies as hundreds of people wearing blue and white pile out of the train. There is no denying that fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs are loyal, because even in the midst of a five-game losing streak, people are still out in droves to see their team play.

Badgers overwhelm Algoma with second-quarter run  

Brock women’s basketball finished the month of November with a decisive home win, pulling away from the Algoma Thunderbirds with a 89-53 victory at Bob Davis Gymnasium on Nov. 29. The result moved Brock to six-four on the season, while Algoma remained winless at 0-10. 

The hidden bias in sports broadcasting  

Broadcasts of women’s sports continue to differ from men’s coverage in ways that are visible, documented and traceable to specific on-air decisions. Across basketball, soccer and tennis, clear examples show how women are described and analyzed differently, while also given different production treatment, even in the highest profile competitions.

Badgers fall hard in loss to the Mustangs  

After five consecutive wins, the Brock Badgers men's basketball team fell to the third-ranked Western Mustangs on Nov. 15 in blowout fashion.  

Chromosomal rules reshape women’s athletics  

After being discontinued in the late 1990s, World Athletics became the first Olympic-governed sport to reinstate mandatory sex verification procedures. Under the current framework, athletes competing in women’s events must undergo sex screening at least once in their careers. The organization has framed the policy as a measure intended to protect “the integrity of competition,” reviving a longstanding and contentious debate at the intersection of sport, biology and human rights. 

Badgers surge towards OUA title contention  

The Brock women’s volleyball team has solidified itself as one of the most consistent teams in OUA, earning their third consecutive appearance in the U SPORTS Top 10 rankings. Now sitting at number seven nationally with a 5-1 record, the Badgers continue to build a profile that suggests they can make a deep postseason run and potentially position themselves to win the OUA final if their current trajectory holds.

Mavericks fire Nico Harrison  

On Nov. 11, the Dallas Mavericks announced that they were relieving Nico Harrison of his duties as general manager and president of basketball operations. His departure comes after a 3-8 start to the 2025-26 NBA season and follows significant strategic decisions that drew scrutiny both internally and externally.

Detroit basketball is officially back 

After an agonizing 15-year period of only two playoff appearances, poor drafting and bad team management, the Detroit Pistons now sit comfortably atop the Eastern Conference with a 15-3 record (as of Nov. 27). It took a long time to get here, but for Pistons fans, it’s most definitely been worth the wait.