WNBA Commissioner's Cup 2026: Everything You Need to Know
Everything You Need to Know: WNBA Commissioner's Cup 2026
The in-season tournament that keeps predicting the champion is back.
The 2026 WNBA Commissioner's Cup tips off tonight — and if you're not paying attention to this tournament, you're missing one of the best crystal balls in sports. Four of the last five Cup winners have gone on to reach the WNBA Finals in the same season. This isn't just a mid-season exhibition. It's a preview of October.
Whether you're a diehard WNBA fan or you're just getting into women's basketball, here's everything you need to know.
What Is the Commissioner's Cup?
The Commissioner's Cup is the WNBA's in-season tournament — think of it like the NBA's In-Season Tournament, but the WNBA actually did it first (2021). It's a 49-game competition built into the regular season schedule where all 15 teams compete for a $500,000 prize pool and bragging rights.
Here's the key: all Cup games except the Championship count toward the regular season standings. So teams aren't resting starters or treating these as meaningless. Every game matters twice — once for the Cup race and once for playoff positioning.
The tournament is in its 6th year and is presented by Coinbase, who also throws in $120,000 in cryptocurrency on top of the prize pool.
The Quick Facts
Cup Play: June 1 – June 17, 2026
Championship Game: June 30, 2026
Teams: All 15 WNBA teams
Prize Pool: $500,000 (winning roster splits it)
Defending Champions: Indiana Fever
Sponsor: Coinbase
How Does It Work?
Each team plays every opponent in its own conference once during Cup play. Eastern Conference teams play 6 Cup games (7 teams in the East) and Western Conference teams play 7 Cup games (8 teams in the West).
When Cup play ends on June 17, the team with the best Cup record from each conference advances to the Championship Game on June 30. If teams are tied, the tiebreakers are: point differential in Cup games first, then head-to-head record.
The conference winner with the better overall record through June 17 gets to host the Championship. So regular season performance outside of Cup play still matters for home court.
It's simple: win your conference's Cup games, make the final, win $500K.
The Conferences
Eastern Conference (7 Teams)
| Team | Record | Cup Note |
|---|---|---|
| Atlanta Dream | 5-2 | Best record in the East. Riding a hot start. |
| New York Liberty | 5-4 | Perennial contender. Ionescu's back is a concern. |
| Toronto Tempo | 5-4 | First-year franchise off to a surprisingly competitive start. |
| Indiana Fever | 4-4 | Defending Cup champions. Can they repeat? |
| Washington Mystics | 3-4 | Solid at home (2-1 conference). Under the radar. |
| Chicago Sky | 3-5 | Elite defense but devastated by injuries. Jackson out for season. |
| Connecticut Sun | 2-8 | In freefall. Griner's eye injury adds uncertainty. |
Western Conference (8 Teams)
| Team | Record | Cup Note |
|---|---|---|
| Minnesota Lynx | 6-2 | Best record in the W, but Collier OUT until 6/15. Massive. |
| Dallas Wings | 5-3 | Surging. Offense is clicking. Kuier out until 6/5. |
| Las Vegas Aces | 5-3 | Always dangerous. Weird rotations though. |
| Golden State Valkyries | 5-3 | Expansion team looking legit. Salaun and Burton are a real duo. |
| Portland Fire | 6-4 | Another expansion team exceeding expectations. |
| Los Angeles Sparks | 4-4 | Right in the middle. Could be a spoiler. |
| Seattle Storm | 3-6 | Struggling. Magbegor and Malonga both out. Thin frontcourt. |
| Phoenix Mercury | 2-7 | Rough start. Multiple players out for season. |
Tonight's Cup Openers
8:00 PM ET Dallas Wings vs. Seattle Storm
Dallas is favored and it's not particularly close. The Wings are 5-3 and hitting their stride offensively, while Seattle is 3-6 and dealing with injuries to Magbegor and Malonga that gut their frontcourt. Dallas should handle this one.
10:00 PM ETPhoenix Mercury at Minnesota Lynx
Minnesota is the better team on paper, but Napheesa Collier — arguably the best player in the WNBA right now — is OUT until June 15 with an ankle injury. The Lynx will play nearly the entire Cup schedule without their MVP candidate. Even against a struggling Phoenix team (2-7), Minnesota without Collier is a different animal.
The Injury Report: Who's Missing?
Season-Altering
| Player | Team | Injury | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Napheesa Collier | MIN | Ankle | OUT — 6/15 |
| Rickea Jackson | CHI | Knee | Out for Season |
| Emma Cechova | MIN | Knee | Out for Season |
| Nika Muhl | POR | Knee | Out for Season |
Cup-Impacting
| Player | Team | Injury | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kelsey Plum | LAS | Ankle | OUT — 6/5 |
| Courtney Vandersloot | CHI | Knee | OUT — 6/7 |
| DiJonai Carrington | CHI | Foot | OUT — 6/7 |
| Ezi Magbegor | SEA | Foot | OUT — 6/6 |
| Dominique Malonga | SEA | Concussion | OUT — 6/3 |
| Awak Kuier | DAL | Wrist | OUT — 6/5 |
| Sami Whitcomb | PHO | Knee | OUT — 6/17 |
Worth Monitoring
| Player | Team | Injury | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sabrina Ionescu | NYL | Back | GTD |
| Brittney Griner | CON | Eye | GTD |
| Jewell Loyd | LVA | Leg | GTD |
| Marine Fauthoux | NYL | Knee | GTD |
| Dana Evans | LVA | Leg | GTD |
Why the Commissioner's Cup Matters
This isn't just a fun mid-season event. The Cup has been an eerily accurate predictor of postseason success:
2021 Seattle Storm won the first-ever Cup. They had won the Finals the year before but came up short in the 2021 Playoffs.
2022 Las Vegas Aces won the Cup and the WNBA Finals in the same year. They were the first team to do so and remain the only team to do so.
2023 New York Liberty won the Cup. The Aces beat them in the Finals — same Championship matchup as the Commissioner's Cup in what was a somewhat lopsided WNBA season in terms of talented teams.
2024 Minnesota Lynx won the Cup. They met the Liberty in the Finals — again, the same matchup as the Cup final. The Liberty ended up winning the WNBA Championship, but a good preview nonetheless.
2025 Indiana Fever won the Cup and made a deep playoff run despite injuries. Ultimately the WNBA Championship was between the Las Vegas Aces and the Phoenix Mercury, with the Aces sweeping (4-0).
Cup Favorites and Sleepers
Eastern Conference Favorites
The Atlanta Dream (5-2) are the team to beat in the East right now. They're playing connected basketball and have the conference's best record heading into Cup play. The Indiana Fever are the defending Cup champions and always play with an edge in this tournament — the Fever roster knows what it takes to win this thing. The New York Liberty have the talent to win any stretch of games, but Ionescu's back issue is the variable that could swing everything.
Western Conference Favorites
Minnesota is probably still the favorite, but Collier's continued absence through June 15 makes this wide open. That opens the door for Dallas (5-3, offense clicking), Las Vegas (5-3, always in the mix), and Golden State (5-3, the Valkyries have been the story of the early season again).
Sleepers
Toronto Tempo (5-4) and Portland Fire (6-4) are both first-year expansion franchises that have been far more competitive than anyone expected. Portland especially has been a revelation — 6-4 with wins over legitimate teams. If either gets hot during Cup play, they could surprise.
Chicago's defense is elite, but their injury list is devastating (Jackson out for season, Carrington and Vandersloot both out through 6/7). If they get healthy mid-Cup, they could have a decent showing. We've yet to see them win a game without Rickea, so I'm not overly optimistic on an over-performance.
Play for More: The Charity Angle
One of the best parts of the Commissioner's Cup is the charitable component. Every team selects a nonprofit organization, and the league makes donations based on results:
$3,000 for a Cup Game Win $1,000for a Cup Game Loss $10,000 for the Championship Winner $5,000 for the Championship Runner-Up
Over the course of the tournament, the league will donate more than $200,000 to team-selected organizations. Every game has stakes beyond the standings.
How to Watch
Cup games air across multiple networks and streaming platforms throughout June. Most games will be available on ESPN, ESPN2, ION, CBS Sports Network, NBA TV, or Prime Video depending on the matchup. League Pass will also carry games (blackouts may apply).
The Bottom Line
The Commissioner's Cup is 49 games in 17 days, followed by a Championship on June 30 worth half a million dollars. It counts toward the regular season, it predicts the Finals, and it's played with real intensity.
With Collier out in Minnesota, Plum recovering in LA, Chicago decimated by injuries, and two expansion teams playing like they belong — this might be the most wide-open Commissioner's Cup we've ever seen.
Who's your pick to win it? 🏆
Discussion in the ATmosphere