Golden State Warriors granted WNBA expansion franchise to begin play in 2025

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WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert, left, is greeted by San Francisco Mayor London Breed after an WNBA expansion franchise for the San Francisco Bay Area was announced Thursday at Chase Center in San Francisco. The team will begin play in the 2025 season. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
From left, Golden State Warriors CEO Joe Lacob, WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert and Warriors Co-Executive Chairman Peter Guber pose for pictures after an WNBA expansion franchise for the San Francisco Bay Area was announced Thursday at Chase Center in San Francisco. The team will begin play in the 2025 season. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
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SAN FRANCISCO — Joe Lacob’s love and support of women’s basketball dates back nearly three decades to when he became one of the original investors in the former American Basketball League.

It became one of his first big sports ventures after watching Tara VanDerveer lead the Americans to a gold medal at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Now, after years of hoping and planning, the WNBA is finally coming to the bay.

“It’s awesome,” Golden State superstar Stephen Curry said.

Lacob is spearheading the operation and happy to do his part, along with everyone else within the Warriors, to build the game — and Stanford coach VanDerveer was in attendance to cheer him on Thursday when Golden State’s expansion franchise became official.

“I wouldn’t care as much about women’s basketball if it weren’t for her,” Lacob said of the Hall of Famer, the winningest women’s coach of all time. “She’s the goddess of women’s basketball.”

WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert announced the expansion team will begin play in the San Francisco Bay Area for the 2025 season. Engelbert has faced constant questions about when the league would expand, to which she would reply when the time was right. The WNBA, which started in 1997, currently has 12 teams.

“It’s thrilling, it’s absolutely thrilling,” VanDerveer said. “I didn’t even know what I would feel and it’s like, ‘Whoo!’ Awesome. I have goosebumps. It takes a lot to get goosebumps for me, too.”

With the addition of the 13th team, Engelbert also hopes to add another ahead of the 2025 season. Sacramento has expressed interest, among other cities.

“I’ve made no secret, I’ve been to Portland, I’ve been to Denver, I’ve been to Toronto. We had a sold-out preseason game in Toronto this year,” she said. “Philadelphia, there’s many — Charlotte.”

The NBA powerhouse Warriors have planned for this since before the opening of Chase Center in 2019. The WNBA team will play in the same arena where Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green are stars.

“The right time, the right moment is today,” Engelbert said, while welcoming, “the next generation of leaders, mothers and athletes.”

Not yet named — Lacob says that will be soon and he’s receiving a flood of suggestions — the organization will be headquartered and train in the Warriors’ former practice facility in Oakland, where the Warriors still hold their youth summer camps.

The plan is to have female executives, likely from the outside, running the new WNBA franchise’s front office, Lacob said. While some positions will be filled from within, Lacob expects to build the team with a mix of those already within the organization and candidates from elsewhere. Resumes are already arriving from coaches and executives.

“Joe is passionate about this sport,” coach Steve Kerr said. “The Warriors’ fortunes changed the second Joe bought the team and said we’re going to win in five years, because he delivered every resource to strengthen the organization at every level. … He’s going to make sure this is a first-class operation because that’s what Joe does.”

Kerr looks forward to perhaps learning from some new perspectives brought into the fold for the women’s franchise “with similar goals but maybe a different way of doing things.”

On hand for the announcement along with VanDerveer were former player and current California coach Charmin Smith, WNBPA Director of Player Relations Jayne Appel and other former stars such as Sheryl Swoopes and Seimone Augustus.