Friday, February 03, 2006

WNBA
Expands To
Atlanta
|
WNBA
President Donna Orender and
Atlanta
owner Ronald Terwilliger celebrate the announcement of the new Atlanta
WNBA franchise at Centennial Olympic Park.
Kent
Smith/NBAE/Getty Images
|
Atlanta
Real Estate Developer to Own Team
For
video of the announcement go to: http://www.wnba.com/atlanta/
NEW YORK
- WNBA
President Donna Orender announced this week that the City of
Atlanta
has been awarded a WNBA expansion team for the 2008 season. The new team will
be owned and operated by
Atlanta
businessman J.
Ronald Terwilliger.
"As
a great sports town and a region that enthusiastically supports women's
athletics,
Atlanta
is a terrific destination for the WNBA" said Orender. "This is a
family-oriented community with tremendous civic pride. I am confident that as a
world-class sports league providing great family entertainment, the WNBA will be
embraced here for years to come. I commend Ron Terwilliger for his efforts in
bringing the WNBA to
Atlanta
and know the league will benefit from his superior leadership skills, business
acumen and commitment to the community."
Since
1986, Terwilliger, 66, has been chairman and chief executive officer of Trammell
Crow Residential, a national residential real estate company and the largest
developer of multi-family housing in the
United States
. As chairman and CEO, Terwilliger is responsible for all residential
development and operations conducted by the company's 23 offices throughout the
country. An honor graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Terwilliger's serves as
vice chairman of the International Board of Directors of Habitat for Humanity
among various community endeavors. The
Arlington
,
VA
native is also the former chairman of the Atlanta Neighborhood Development
Partnership.
"I
am excited to make this contribution to
Atlanta
's sports community. Our effort is to transcend sports, making a statement of
encouragement and support to girls and women in our society. I am participating
as a sports fan who will enjoy the journey and as a dad for his daughters and
other young women like them. We are committed to developing a successful team,
taking the time and expending the energy to build something very special. And, I
am hoping that Atlantans will adopt this team and embrace it as their own. We
will make our mark in the history books with this team and have a great time
doing it."
"This
event is the culmination of a community-wide campaign to bring a WNBA franchise
to
Atlanta
," said Lisa Borders, President of the Atlanta City Council. "The WNBA
is the premier women's professional sports league in the world, and we could not
be more excited to welcome the WNBA and these world-class athletes to our great
city."
The
Atlanta
franchise, which will choose a name, logo, colors and head coach at a later
date, is the sixth WNBA team to be independently owned and operated.
For
information and to purchase season tickets for
Atlanta
's 2008 season, fans can call (404) 604-2626.
E-mail inquiries should be sent to atlantatickets@wnba.com.
The WNBA
will feature 14 teams in 2008, with the Eastern and Western Conferences
comprised of seven teams each.
Atlanta
will join the Chicago Sky,
Connecticut
Sun, Detroit Shock, Indiana Fever, New York Liberty and Washington Mystics in
the Eastern Conference, while the Houston Comets, Los Angeles Sparks, Minnesota
Lynx, Phoenix Mercury, Sacramento Monarchs, San Antonio Silver Stars and Seattle
Storm will continue to comprise the Western Conference.
Including
the new
Atlanta
franchise, six WNBA teams are owned and operated independently of the NBA. The
Mohegan Tribe became the first independent ownership group when it purchased the
Connecticut
Sun in 2003. In February 2005, Michael Alter purchased the expansion Chicago
Sky (which began play in 2006) while the Washington Mystics were sold to Sheila
Johnson (Lincoln Holdings, LLC), in 2005. In December 2006, Katherine Goodman
and Carla Christofferson bought the Los Angeles Sparks, while
Houston
businessman Hilton Koch purchased the Houston Comets in January 2007.
The WNBA
enjoyed one of its most successful seasons ever in 2007 with increased regular
season attendance, a new postseason attendance record and Finals viewership on
ESPN2 that was up 12 percent vs. 2006. Spectacular performances from the world's
best women's basketball players highlighted the WNBA's 11th season. The Storm's
Lauren Jackson tied a league record for points in a game (47) and also became
the youngest player ever to reach 4,000 career points en route to earning league
MVP honors, while the Mercury's Diana Taurasi scored 30-or-more points per game
a league-record 10 times. Led by 2007 All-Stars Taurasi, Cappie Pondexter and
Penny Taylor, the Mercury capped the most exciting WNBA season ever by defeating
the defending champion Detroit Shock in five games in the WNBA Finals.