2026 WNBA Draft Recap
Azzi Fudd Went No.1 In The WNBA Draft—And Now She’ll Play With Her Girlfriend Paige Bueckers
This year's WNBA Draft was filled with headlines that will undoubtedly make the W's 30th season its biggest and best yet!
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- Azzi Fudd and Paige Bueckers reunite on Dallas Wings, forming a formidable backcourt duo.

The biggest headline coming out of the 2026 WNBA Draft was easy to spot: Azzi Fudd went No. 1 overall to the Dallas Wings, which means she’s heading right back to the same team as Paige Bueckers. That reunion is already the part of the night people are talking about most, and for good reason. It’s not just a feel-good story —it’s a basketball story too. Dallas now has a chance to build something scary with Paige running the show, Arike Ogunbowale applying pressure, and Fudd bringing elite shot-making and floor spacing to the mix. The timing makes it hit even harder, as this class is entering the league at a time when the W is clearly leveling up. The draft came with bigger money, bigger attention and even more pressure after the league’s new CBA dramatically boosted rookie salaries, including a reported $500,000 first-year payday for Fudd.
That larger context matters because this draft was never just about one pick. The WNBA is heading into its 30th season, and this class arrives with real momentum as the league continues to expand, growing its reach and leaning harder into star power. The 2026 WNBA draft was held at The Shed in New York, featured 45 picks because of expansion, and felt like another reminder that women’s basketball is moving differently now. Between the fresh money from the new labor deal, the added roster spots, and two new franchises entering the mix, this was one of those drafts that felt less like a routine league event and more like a marker for where the sport is headed next.
Below, check out some of the headlines that stole the night!
Azzi Fudd & Paige Bueckers Are Reunited In Dallas
This is the headline that’s going to live the longest. Fudd landing in Dallas gives Paige Bueckers a running mate she already knows how to play with, and it gives the Wings exactly the kind of spacing they needed. Azzi is a pure shooter, the kind of guard who can punish any defense for loading up on Paige or Arike.

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That matters because Dallas was one of the league’s weakest three-point shooting teams last season, so this isn’t just cute symmetry — it’s roster logic. Add in the fact that Azzi and Paige are together off the court, too, and the story writes itself.
UCLA Turned A Title Run Into A Historic Draft Flex

Fresh off winning the national championship, UCLA absolutely ran the draft. The Bruins produced five first-round picks and six total selections, setting records and turning the night into a full-on celebration of what the team just accomplished. Lauren Betts, Gabriela Jaquez, Kiki Rice, Angela Dugalić and Gianna Kneepkens all went in the first round, while Charlisse Leger-Walker made it six overall. That’s not just depth — that’s a program showing it had pros all over the floor.
Flau’jae Went To The Bay…Then Got Sent To Seattle
One of the most confusing storylines of the night centered on Flau’jae Johnson. Golden State drafted her at No. 8, then moved her rights to Seattle in exchange for Marta Suárez and a future second-round pick. That instantly had people looking sideways at the Valkyries, because Flau’jae feels like exactly the kind of talent and personality an expansion team should want to build around. Seattle clearly saw value there, and on paper, it’s easy to understand why. She brings scoring pop, star power and a real chance to become one of the faces of this class. For Golden State, though, many people came away feeling the move just didn’t add up.
Seattle Went International Again & Doubled Down On Its New Frontcourt

The Storm used the No. 3 pick on Spain’s Awa Fam Thiam, making her the highest-drafted Spanish player in WNBA draft history, then later added Flau’jae through the previously mentioned trade. Seattle is clearly remaking itself in real time. Fam joins a frontcourt picture that’s getting younger, longer and more international (Dominique Malonga and Ezi Magbegor are both already on the team). It makes sense for a team that lost a bunch of important contributors (Nneka Ogwumike, Skylar Diggins-Smith, Gabby Williams, Brittney Sykes, Erica Wheeler) this offseason and needed to reset some of its identity. The Storm didn’t draft for nostalgia — they drafted for what the next version of the franchise could look like.
Ta’Niya Latson Slid More Than Expected

After the kind of NCAA Tournament run she put together, a lot of people expected Ta’Niya Latson to come off the board earlier. Instead, she lasted until the second round, where the Sparks grabbed her. That could end up being one of the steals of the night. She’s still one of the most explosive scorers in the class, and sometimes teams overthink size, fit, or long-term projection and let a real bucket-getter slip. Latson’s slide felt like one of those moments.
Toronto & Portland Both Made Their First Ever Draft Picks

Expansion always adds a little extra juice, and both new franchises got their own piece of history Monday night. Toronto made Kiki Rice its first-ever entry draft pick, while Portland used its first college-draft selection on Iyana Martin. Those are the kinds of picks that live in franchise history forever, even before either player logs a minute. Rice gives Toronto a poised, winning guard to grow with, while Martin gives Portland a young international point guard with real upside and already serious résumé lines in Europe. That matters because these teams aren’t just adding players — they’re building identity from scratch.
Some All-Time Guard Talent Found New Homes In The Midwest
The top of this draft had serious guard juice, and two of the biggest names are headed to the Midwest. Olivia Miles went No. 2 to Minnesota, while Raven Johnson landed at No. 10 with Indiana. Miles to the Lynx is especially interesting because Minnesota gets a creative lead guard with size, vision and star upside, while Indiana adds another smart backcourt piece in Raven, who’s already proven she can impact winning at a high level. Different players, different styles, but both feel like fits that could age really well.
Washington Quietly Had One Of The Strongest Nights Of Anybody
While a lot of the conversation centered on Dallas, UCLA and Seattle, the Mystics put together one of the most productive drafts in the league. Washington walked away with Lauren Betts at No. 4, Angea Dugalić at No. 9 and Cotie McMahon at No. 11, then kept adding from there. That’s the kind of draft haul that can change a team’s trajectory fast. Betts alone gives them a potential franchise-level frontcourt anchor, and the rest of the class gives them even more toughness, size and scoring depth.
The Draft Was Starry — The Whole Event Felt Big Time
The WNBA has turned the draft into more than a commissioner-at-the-podium moment, and this year kept that energy going. The event at The Shed came with the usual orange-carpet fashion flex, Paige Bueckers was in the building for Azzi’s moment, and the overall presentation leaned all the way into the league’s Season 30 celebration. On top of that, Olympic gold medalist Jordan Chiles was part of the draft-night buzz orbit around UCLA’s massive showing, which only added to the sense that this was bigger than just a basketball ceremony. That’s really the point now: the WNBA Draft is turning into a cultural event, not just a transaction show.
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See social media’s reaction to draft below.
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