1998 WNBA season

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1998 WNBA season
Duration May - September
Games 30
Teams 10
Total attendance 1,630,315
Average attendance 10,869
TV partner/s ESPN, NBC, Lifetime
Draft
Top draft pick Poland Margo Dydek
Picked by Utah Starzz
Regular season
Season MVP United States Cynthia Cooper (Houston)
Stat leaders
    Points C. Cooper (22.7)
    Rebounds L. Leslie (10.2)
    Assists T. Penicheiro (7.5)
Playoffs
East champions none due to setup
  East runners-up   Cleveland Rockers
West champions Houston Comets, Phoenix Mercury
  West runners-up   none due to setup
Finals
Finals champions Houston Comets
  Runners-up   Phoenix Mercury
Finals MVP United States Cynthia Cooper (Houston)
WNBA seasons

← 1997

1999 →

The 1998 WNBA Season was the Women's National Basketball Association's second season. The 1998 season saw two expansion teams join the league, the Detroit Shock and Washington Mystics. The expansion teams allowed the defending champions Houston Comets to move to the Western Conference. The regular season was extend from 28 games to 30 games. The season ended with the Houston Comets winning their second WNBA championship.

Regular season standings

Eastern Conference

Eastern Conference W L PCT Conf. GB
Cleveland Rockers x 20 10 .667 12–4
Charlotte Sting x 18 12 .600 11–5 2.0
New York Liberty o 18 12 .600 8–8 2.0
Detroit Shock o 17 13 .567 8–8 3.0
Washington Mystics o 3 27 .100 1–15 17.0

Western Conference

Western Conference W L PCT Conf. GB
Houston Comets x 27 3 .900 15–1
Phoenix Mercury x 19 11 .633 10–6 8.0
Los Angeles Sparks o 12 18 .400 6–10 15.0
Sacramento Monarchs o 8 22 .267 5–11 19.0
Utah Starzz o 8 22 .267 4–12 19.0

Season award winners

Award Winner Team
WNBA Finals MVP Award Cynthia Cooper Houston Comets
WNBA Most Valuable Player Award Cynthia Cooper Houston Comets
WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award Teresa Weatherspoon New York Liberty
WNBA Newcomer of the Year Award Suzie McConnell Serio Cleveland Rockers
WNBA Peak Performer Isabelle Fijalkowski Cleveland Rockers
WNBA Peak Performer Sandy Brondello Detroit Shock
WNBA Rookie of the Year Award Tracy Reid Charlotte Sting
WNBA Sportsmanship Award Suzie McConnell Serio Cleveland Rockers
WNBA Coach of the Year Award Van Chancellor Houston Comets

Playoffs

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There were 10 teams in the league. For the playoffs, the four teams with the best record in the league were seeded one to four. Houston was switched to the Western Conference in 1997 so two Western Conference teams matched up in the WNBA Finals. Each round of the playoffs were played a best-of-three series.

WNBA Semi-Finals
Best of 3
WNBA Finals
Best of 3
           
W1 Houston 2
E2 Charlotte 0
W1 Houston 2
W2 Phoenix 1
W2 Phoenix 2
E1 Cleveland 1

External links