List of Seattle Storm seasons

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The Seattle Storm are a professional American women's basketball team based in Seattle, Washington, that competes in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). They are a member of the Western Conference and joined the league in the 2000 season as one of four expansion franchises that year.[1][2] The Storm initially shared ownership with the Seattle SuperSonics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and played at the same home venue, KeyArena on the Seattle Center campus. During the relocation of the SuperSonics, the Storm were sold to a new ownership group and remained at KeyArena until it closed after the 2018 season for major renovations.[3] The team temporarily relocated to the Hec Edmundson Pavilion on the University of Washington campus during the 2019 season and Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett during the 2019 and 2021 seasons;[4][5] the shortened 2020 season was played entirely behind closed doors at an isolated site in Bradenton, Florida, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[6] Since 2022, the Storm have played at Climate Pledge Arena, a new facility built on the site of KeyArena that has a capacity of 13,500 seats for most WNBA games.[7]

Interior of a basketball arena showing a large crowd in the lower tiers while the upper tiers, ringed by video advertisement boards, is blocked off
A regular season game between the Seattle Storm and Atlanta Dream at Climate Pledge Arena in 2022
Interior of a basketball arena with a sparse crowd and empty red seats in many sections. A large video board hangs above the court, where players are warming up in small groups.
A regular season game at KeyArena in 2007

In their 26 seasons, the Storm have an all-time regular season record of 467 wins and 421 losses, the fourth-best among active WNBA teams.[8][9] The team qualified for the WNBA Playoffs in 20 seasons and have an all-time record of 36 wins and 33 losses.[8][10] During those playoff runs, the Storm appeared in four WNBA Finals and won the league championship in all four finals.[11] The team also won the inaugural edition of the WNBA Commissioner's Cup, an in-season tournament that debuted in 2021 after a one-year delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[12][13] The team's players include three-time WNBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) winner Lauren Jackson, one-time MVP winner Breanna Stewart, and three-time Sportsmanship Award winner Sue Bird.[14][15] The trio were among eight Storm players named to The W25, a selection of the 25 best players in WNBA history selected for the league's 25th anniversary in 2021.[16]

The Storm made their debut on May 31, 2000,[17] and finished their first season with a 6–26 win–loss record, the worst in the league that year. The team selected Sue Bird with the first pick of the 2002 WNBA draft and finished their third season with a 17–15 record and their first playoff berth, which ended in a loss in the Western Conference Semifinals.[1] The Storm won their first WNBA championship in the 2004 Finals, where they defeated the Connecticut Sun with two wins in three games; it was the first professional sports championship for Seattle since the SuperSonics won the 1979 NBA Finals.[18] The season also marked the start of a ten-year streak of playoff appearances—the longest in WNBA history at the time[19]—but the team were eliminated in the Western Conference Semifinals for five consecutive years from 2005 to 2009.[20] The Storm finished the 2010 regular season as the top seed in the WNBA and tied the league record for most wins in the regular season with a 28–6 record; they won their second championship that year and became the second WNBA team to win a title without a single loss in the playoffs, which culminated in a three-game sweep of the Atlanta Dream.[1][21]

Despite limited appearances for injured star players Lauren Jackson and Sue Bird, the team qualified for the playoffs in the following three seasons but never advanced beyond the first round.[22] The Storm failed to qualify for the playoffs in the 2014 and 2015 seasons, but earned the top pick in the subsequent WNBA draft for two consecutive years;[1] Breanna Stewart and Jewell Loyd were chosen in those drafts and both won the Rookie of the Year Award in their debut seasons.[23] The team returned to the playoffs in subsequent years but were again eliminated in the first round; under new head coach Dan Hughes, the Storm won their third championship in 2018 with a three-game shutout of the Washington Mystics.[22] After a second-round exit in the 2019 playoffs—attributed to the absence of Bird and Stewart—the team won their fourth championship against the Las Vegas Aces in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season.[1][6] The Storm were eliminated from the 2021 playoffs after one game and the 2022 playoffs in the second round;[10] the team did not qualify for the playoffs in the 2023 season but returned in the 2024 season, where they lost to the Las Vegas Aces in the first round.[24][25]

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Seasons

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Seattle Storm record by season
Year Season Conference Regular season[8] Playoff results[11] Commissioner's
Cup
results[26]
Awards Head coach[8]
W L Pct Finish
2000 2000 Western626.1888th DNQ Established in 2020 Lin Dunn
2001 2001 Western1022.3138th DNQ
2002 2002 Western1715.5314th ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Los Angeles, 0–2
2003 2003 Western1816.5294th DNQ Lauren Jackson (MVPTooltip WNBA Most Valuable Player Award)[27] Anne Donovan
2004  2004 Western2014.5882nd ¤ Won Conf. Semis vs. Minnesota, 2–0
Won Conf. Finals vs. Sacramento, 2–1
Won WNBA Finals vs. Connecticut, 2–1
Betty Lennox (FMVPTooltip WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award)[28]
2005 2005 Western2014.5882nd ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Houston, 1–2
2006 2006 Western1816.5293rd ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Los Angeles, 1–2
2007 2007 Western1717.5004th ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Phoenix, 0–2 Lauren Jackson (MVPTooltip WNBA Most Valuable Player Award, DPOYTooltip WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award)[27][29]
2008 2008 Western2212.6472nd ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Los Angeles, 1–2 Brian Agler
2009 2009 Western2014.5882nd ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Los Angeles, 1–2
2010  2010  Western *286.8241st * Won Conf. Semis vs. Los Angeles, 2–0
Won Conf. Finals vs. Phoenix, 2–0
Won WNBA Finals vs. Atlanta, 3–0
Brian Agler (COYTooltip WNBA Coach of the Year Award)[30]
Lauren Jackson (MVPTooltip WNBA Most Valuable Player Award, FMVPTooltip WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award)[27][28]
2011 2011 Western2113.6182nd ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Phoenix, 1–2 Sue Bird (SPORTooltip Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award)[31]
2012 2012 Western1618.4714th ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Minnesota, 1–2
2013 2013 Western1717.5004th ¤ Lost Conf. Semis vs. Minnesota, 0–2
2014 2014 Western1222.3535th DNQ
2015 2015 Western1024.2945th DNQ Jewell Loyd (ROYTooltip WNBA Rookie of the Year Award)[32] Jenny Boucek
2016 2016 Western1618.4713rd ¤ Lost First round vs. Atlanta, 0–1 Breanna Stewart (ROYTooltip WNBA Rookie of the Year Award)[32]
2017 2017 Western1519.4415th ¤ Lost First round vs. Phoenix, 0–1 Sue Bird (SPORTooltip Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award)[31] Jenny Boucek (10–16)
Gary Kloppenburg (5–3)
2018  2018  Western *268.7651st * Won Semifinals vs. Phoenix, 3–2
Won WNBA Finals vs. Washington, 3–0
Breanna Stewart (MVPTooltip WNBA Most Valuable Player Award, FMVPTooltip WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award)[27][28]
Natasha Howard (MIPTooltip WNBA Most Improved Player Award)[33]
Sue Bird (SPORTooltip Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award)[31]
Dan Hughes
2019 2019 Western1816.5293rd ¤ Won First round vs. Minnesota, 1–0
Lost Second round vs. Los Angeles, 0–1
Natasha Howard (DPOYTooltip WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award)[29]
2020  2020 Western184.8182nd ¤[a] Won Semifinals vs. Minnesota, 3–0
Won WNBA Finals vs. Las Vegas, 3–0
Not held Breanna Stewart (FMVPTooltip WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award)[28] Gary Kloppenburg
2021  2021 ^ Western2111.6563rd ¤ Lost Second round vs. Phoenix, 0–1 Won Commissioner's Cup vs. Connecticut ^ Dan Hughes (5–1)
Noelle Quinn (16–10)
2022 2022 Western2214.6112nd ¤ Won First round vs. Washington, 2–0
Lost Second round vs. Las Vegas, 1–3
DNQ Noelle Quinn
2023 2023 Western1129.2755th DNQ DNQ
2024 2024 Western2515.6253rd ¤ Lost First round vs. Las Vegas, 0–2 DNQ
2025 2025 Western2321.5234th ¤[b] Lost First round vs. Las Vegas, 1–2 Eliminated in first round (4–2)
Totals (26 seasons)[8] 467 421 .526 All-time regular season record (2000–2025)
36 33 .522 All-time playoffs record (2000–2025)
503 454 .526 All-time overall record (2000–2025)
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Notes

  1. The Seattle Storm had an identical 18–4 record with the Las Vegas Aces, but lost the top seed in the Western Conference on a head-to-head tiebreaker.[34]
  2. The Seattle Storm had an identical 23–21 record with the Golden State Valkyries and each won twice in their head-to-head series. The second tiebreaker, record against teams with a winning percentage above .500, was won by the Storm.[35]

References

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