Connecticut Sun, American professional basketball team that plays in the Eastern Conference of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA). For the first four years of its existence, the franchise was based in Orlando, Florida, and was named the Orlando Miracle. The team moved to Uncasville, Connecticut, in 2003. It has appeared in the WNBA finals four times (2004, 2005, 2019, and 2022) but has yet to win a title.
The Miracle began play as an expansion franchise in 1999. The team first made the playoffs in 2000, when it advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals before losing to the Cleveland Rockers. The franchise struggled financially, however. In October 2002 it was announced that the team would relocate for the 2003 season. The Miracle’s owner, RDV Sports—the same company that owned the National Basketball Association’s (NBA’s) Orlando Magic—sold the team to the Mohegan American Indian tribe. The tribe operated the Mohegan Sun, a casino complex in Uncasville, and the team began play in a multipurpose arena in the complex. Renamed the Connecticut Sun, the team was the first WNBA franchise to be owned by a group unaffiliated with an NBA team. In February 2003 the Sun acquired former University of Connecticut (UConn) star Rebecca Lobo in a trade with the Houston Comets. Lobo joined another former UConn standout on the Sun’s roster, Nykesha Sales, and the two “hometown heroes” helped draw fans and generate publicity for the team.
Under head coach Mike Thibault the Sun compiled a win-loss record of 18–16 in 2003. In the playoffs the team reached the Eastern Conference finals, where it fell to the Detroit Shock, and Lobo retired at the season’s end. Behind the play of Sales, Lindsay Whalen, and Taj McWilliams-Franklin, the Sun won the Eastern Conference title in 2004, though the team lost in the finals to the Seattle Storm. The Sun returned to the finals the following year after posting a league-best 26–8 record, but again the team came up short, this time losing in the finals to the Sacramento Monarchs.
Thibault was named the league’s coach of the year in both 2006 and 2008, when the Sun went 26–8 and 21–13, respectively. The team’s record slipped to 16–18 in 2009. The next year the Sun selected UConn’s Tina Charles with the first overall pick in the WNBA draft, and she soon became a dominant force in the league. In 2011 she led the Sun back to the playoffs, where the team was eliminated in the Eastern Conference semifinals by the Atlanta Dream. In 2012 Charles averaged 18 points and 10.5 rebounds per game en route to winning the WNBA Most Valuable Player award. That season the Sun advanced to the Eastern Conference finals but lost to the Indiana Fever.
From 2013 to 2015 the Sun failed to reach the playoffs under head coach and Hall of Fame former player Anne Donovan. Curt Miller took over as head coach in 2016, and three years later the Sun again emerged as title contenders. In 2019 the team made another appearance in the finals, where it lost to the Washington Mystics in a five-game series. In 2021 the Sun finished the regular season atop the league standings (26–6) but suffered an upset loss to the Chicago Sky in the semifinals of the playoffs. In 2022 the Sun defeated the Sky in their semifinals rematch but lost the championship series to the Las Vegas Aces.