The Minnesota Lynx are an American professional basketball team based in Minneapolis. The Lynx compete in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) as a member of the Western Conference. The team won the WNBA title in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017.
Founded prior to the 1999 season, the team was owned by Glen Taylor, who was also the majority owner of the Lynx' NBA counterpart, the Minnesota Timberwolves, from 1999 to 2025. The current owners of the Lynx are Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore. The franchise has been home to players such as Katie Smith, Seimone Augustus, Minnesota native Lindsay Whalen, Maya Moore, Rebekkah Brunson, and Sylvia Fowles.
The Lynx have qualified for the WNBA playoffs in 15 of their 26 years.
On April 22, 1998, the WNBA announced that Minnesota, alongside the Orlando Miracle, would be reciving an expansion teams for the 1999 season. The Minnesota team was officially named the Minnesota Lynx on December 5, 1998.
The league held their second expansion draft for the Lynx and the Miracle on April 6, 1999. The Lynx began their inaugural season in 1999 with 12,122 fans in attendance at Target Center. The Lynx defeated the Detroit Shock 68âÂÂ51 to win the franchise's first regular-season game They finished their first season 15âÂÂ17 overall and held the same record in 2000.
In 2001, the Lynx took a turn for the worse as they posted a 12âÂÂ20 record. Following their poor 2001 performance, the Lynx began the 2002 season 6-13. This prompted the team to replace their head coach, Brian Agler. The Lynx' first head coach finished his tenure with a 47âÂÂ67 record in three-plus seasons. Heidi VanDerveer became the interim head coach for the remainder of the 2002 season. Her interum position would ultimately not be extended as the team completed their remaining schedule 4-9 for an overall 10âÂÂ22 record, worst in franchise history (until 2006).
Suzie McConnell-Serio took over as head coach for the 2003 season. She led the team to finish with a franchise-best 18âÂÂ16 record, the Lynx' first winning season. The team also advanced to the WNBA Playoffs for the first time, winning Game 1 but ultimately losing the best-of-three series 2-1 to the Los Angeles Sparks. The 2004 season would see the Lynx finish with the same record, and making the playoffs for their second consecutive year, falling this time 2-0 to the eventual winner, Seattle Storm, in the Western Conference semifinals.
The 2005 season was one of transition for the franchise. Leading scorer Katie Smith was dealt to Detroit in July and the team stumbled down the stretch, missing the playoffs for the first time in three years. The poor finish did pay off however, as the team won the draft lottery and selected All-American guard Seimone Augustus of Louisiana State University with the first overall pick in the 2006 WNBA draft.
The Lynx began the 2006 season as the youngest team in the WNBA. On May 31, the team set the WNBA single-game scoring record (at the time), routing the Los Angeles Sparks by a score of 114âÂÂ71. Despite this victory and with her team floundering to an 8âÂÂ15 record, head coach McConnell-Serio resigned on July 23. She was replaced by assistant Carolyn Jenkins, who piloted the squad to a 2âÂÂ9 finish. The team's 24 losses set a franchise record.
Following the season, Augustus was named the 2006 WNBA Rookie of the Year. Her 21.9 points per game is still a WNBA rookie record. The 22-year-old was the second player in team history to win the award.
On December 13, 2006, the Lynx named veteran NBA assistant Don Zierden their fifth head coach.
In the 2007 WNBA draft, the Lynx traded center Tangela Smith, whom they acquired in the dispersal draft from the Charlotte Sting, to the Phoenix Mercury for point guard Lindsey Harding, who had been selected first overall.
The Lynx began the 2007 season 0âÂÂ7, lost ten straight in July and failed to get into the playoff race. They finished tying a league-worst 10âÂÂ24 record. On November 1, 2007, assistant coach and former head coach Carolyn Jenkins was named Director of Player Personnel of the WNBA.
The 2008 season started out much different for the Lynx than in previous years. They came flying out of the gates, going 7âÂÂ1 in the first five weeks of the season. The Lynx then cooled off. They managed to play competitive basketball all season, but lost many key games down the stretch. The Lynx finished with a 16âÂÂ18 record in a tough Western Conference where every team was in the playoff chase until the final week of the season. The Lynx however, did not qualify. After two consecutive 10âÂÂ24 seasons, the 2008 Lynx was a step in the right direction.
In 2009, Zierden resigned just days before the start of the season. Jennifer Gillom who replaced Teresa Edwards as an assistant coach the previous year, was promoted to head coach. Another Zierden Lynx assistant, former NBA player Jim Petersen stayed with Gillom during the season, working with post players Charde Houston and Nicky Anosike. The Lynx saw similar results in 2008. They started with a good run (7âÂÂ3), but lost many key games, including a six-game losing streak, and finished 14âÂÂ20, out from the playoffs for the fifth straight season.
After five disappointing seasons, the off-season brought much more impact to the franchise. The team hired former Detroit Shock assistant coach Cheryl Reeve as their new head coach, parting ways with Jennifer Gillom, who took the head coaching job of the Los Angeles Sparks. The Lynx also made some moves in the off-season by selecting Rebekkah Brunson in the Sacramento Monarchs dispersal draft, and trading their first overall pick of the 2010 WNBA draft and Renee Montgomery to the Connecticut Sun for former Minnesota Gopher Lindsay Whalen and the second overall pick. They added free agent Hamchétou Maïga to the lineup, and selected University of Virginia guard Monica Wright with the second pick in the 2010 Draft. With these off-season transactions, the Lynx looked forward to a much improved 2010 season, which was echoed by the eighth annual WNBA general manager poll â 45% of the general managers declared the Lynx the most-improved team as the 2010 season began.
The selection of Maya Moore during the 2011 WNBA draft led many people to believe the Lynx to be championship contenders for the 2011 season. The team finally lived up to expectations in 2011, behind stellar play from Seimone Augustus, Rebekkah Brunson, Moore, and Whalen, all of whom were named to the 2011 Western Conference All-Star Team. The Lynx went into the All-Star break with a 10âÂÂ4 record, good for first place in the conference. After losing to Phoenix in a 112âÂÂ105 contest at Target Center on July 13, the Lynx went on a nine-game winning streak, at the time a franchise record and the longest in the league for 2011. The team finished with a 27âÂÂ7 record, best in the WNBA and in team history.
The Lynx earned the top overall seed in the 2011 WNBA Playoffs. In the first round, they defeated the San Antonio Silver Stars two-games-to-one in the best of three series. The Lynx then swept the Phoenix Mercury in two games to win their first conference championship. In the Finals, the Lynx trailed at halftime in each game, but rallied each time to sweep the Atlanta Dream in three games, securing their first WNBA title, and the first professional championship for the state of Minnesota since the Minnesota Twins won the World Series in 1991. Seimone Augustus was named Finals MVP.
In 2012, the team began the season 10âÂÂ0, a franchise and league record. They clinched a playoff berth on August 19, 2012, just 21 games into the season. The team fell to the Indiana Fever in the 2012 WNBA Finals.
The Lynx used both the loss in the Finals and prognosticators' pre-season focus on the Phoenix Mercury's new phenom, Brittney Griner, to motivate themselves for the 2013 season. The Lynx once again had the best record in the West. They completed their comeback, sweeping through the playoffs en route to their second championship in three years, once again defeating the Atlanta Dream. Maya Moore, showing why she's now a superstar in the WNBA, won the 2013 WNBA Finals MVP. In doing so, the Lynx became the second WNBA team and fifth major professional sports franchise to sweep through the postseason.
In 2014, the Lynx again had a successful regular season, claiming the second best record in the league, second only to Griner and the Mercury. However, in the playoffs, the Mercury bested them 2âÂÂ1 in a three-game series, and the Lynx failed to make the finals for the first time since the 2010 season.
In 2015, two-time Defensive Player of the Year Sylvia Fowles of the Chicago Sky held out of her contract until her wish was granted in July to play for Minnesota. The Lynx would go on to win their third franchise title, all three of them in a five-year span dating back to 2011. Fowles proved herself to be a crucial addition, earning finals MVP honors.
After winning the WNBA title in 2015, the Lynx qualified to the 2016 WNBA Playoffs as the top seed with a franchise record 28âÂÂ6 finish, only entering in the semi-finals to face the Phoenix Mercury. Due to the Target Center entering a renovation, the team moved to the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, where the Lynx played the 2017 regular season. A sweep of the Mercury qualified the Lynx for their fifth finals in six years, with the adversary being the Los Angeles Sparks. The Lynx would not repeat their title, as the Sparks edged out the Lynx in a five-game series, eventually winning game 5 by 1 point.
On August 18, 2017, the Lynx set two WNBA records in their 111âÂÂ52 defeat of the Indiana Fever: largest margin of victory (59 points) and longest unanswered scoring run (37 consecutive points). The Lynx finished as the top seed in the league, finishing 27âÂÂ7. In the semi-finals, the Lynx defeated the Washington Mystics in a three-game sweep to advance to the WNBA Finals for the sixth time in seven years. The Lynx avenged 2016's Finals loss to the Sparks by defeating them in five games to win their fourth championship in seven seasons and tying the now-defunct Houston Comets for most WNBA championship titles.
In 2018, with back-up point guard Renee Montgomery leaving in free agency to sign with the Atlanta Dream and a now aging roster intact, the Lynx would start falling way short of championship contention. Although Moore, Fowles, Augustus and Brunson made All-Star appearances, the Lynx finished as the number 7 seed in the league with an 18âÂÂ16 record. This was the first time in 8 years where the Lynx did not finish as a top 2 seed. Lindsay Whalen also announced her retirement prior to the playoffs. The Lynx started off their playoff run against the rival Los Angeles Sparks in the first round elimination game. They lost 75âÂÂ68, ending their run of three consecutive Finals appearances, and it was Whalen's final career game.
In 2019 and 2020, however, the Lynx would produce players that won WNBA Rookie of the Year with Napheesa Collier and Crystal Dangerfield, respectively.
Sylvia Fowles was the last of the Lynx's dynastic five starters (Augustus, Whalen, Moore, Brunson, and Fowles) to retire when she did so after the 2022 season.
Napheesa Collier became the new leader of the Lynx in her fifth season in the league when she returned for the 2023 season and was named the sole captain, the first time Reeve had done so while coaching the Lynx. Reeve told Winsdr about the rebuild around Collier: "âÂÂPhee is the epitome of what we want to see. A selfless person, emotionally mature, and handles ups and downs in a way thatâÂÂs just really impressive... WeâÂÂre trying to make sure weâÂÂre giving her a team that she wants to play with and thereâÂÂs a clear direction with our team and who weâÂÂre putting around her. ThatâÂÂs important to us.âÂÂ
With their June 11, 2024, win against the Las Vegas Aces in Vegas, the Lynx became the first WNBA team to have all five starting players each score 14+ points, 4+ rebounds, and 1+ 3 pointers.
With a score of 94âÂÂ89, the Lynx won the 2024 WNBA Commissioner's Cup championship against the Liberty in their June 25, 2024, game playing in New York. Napheesa Collier was named the MVP for the championship. Collier said Bridget Carleton deserved the award for her performance in the game.
The team's 90âÂÂ80 win against the Indiana Fever on August 24, 2024, clinched a playoff spot for the franchise. The game set a record for the franchise single game regular season attendance with 19,023; this is the second best attendance for any Lynx home game overall, behind only Game 5 of the 2016 WNBA Finals (19,423). The Lynx retired Maya Moore's jersey in a ceremony after the game.
The home uniforms are white with blue and silver trim. The team jerseys bear the logo of the team's jersey sponsor, the Mayo Clinic, in blue. The road uniforms are blue with silver and white trim and the sponsor logo written in silver. The Lynx previously used an Adidas uniform that was standard throughout the league, but the WNBA partnered with Nike, Inc. for eight years beginning in 2018. The Lynx are also one of 11 WNBA teams sponsored by Verizon, whose logo is also prominently featured on their uniforms.
During the 2016 season, the white uniforms were temporarily replaced by a new silver uniform. This was part of a league-wide initiative for its 20th season, in which all games featured all-color uniform matchups.
In 2021, the WNBA worked with Nike to redesign team uniforms. For the Lynx, this resulted in three versions, dubbed as Heroines, Explorers, and Rebels. The Heroine version was white with blue and green stripes and blue numbers. The Explorer uniform was blue with green and black trim and white numbers. The Rebel edition was black with black stars, white and silver trim, and white numbers. The team was abbreviated to MINN on the front of this jersey, which was inspired by the adjacent legendary music club First Avenue.
In 2023, the team unveiled updated Rebel versions of its uniform, which is black with green trim and white and green letters and numbers. This design includes "Change starts with us" down the side of the jerseys and on the front of the shorts. This refers back to 2016 when the team wore warm ups with that phrase to call for social justice and protest the murders of two Black men by police. The four stripes on the side of the uniforms represent the team's four championships.
The Minnesota Lynx Foundation holds an annual "Catwalk for a Cure" event at the Mall of America during the WNBA's Breast Health Awareness Week to raise funds for breast cancer related charities. The 2011 event was held Aug 5 and raised $5,000 for Susan G. Komen for the Cure.
In 2012, the Lynx hosted the Catwalk for a Cure at the Mall of America rotunda for the first time, occupying the largest staging area inside the country's biggest mall. In addition to displaying outfits, Lynx players ended the show with a dance based on the song "Background" by Lecrae and Andy Mineo. The Lynx Foundation donated a $5,000 grant to the SAGE program, run by the Minnesota Department of Health.
During the WNBA's 2013 Breast Health Awareness Week and in partnership with the Edith Sanford Breast Cancer Foundation, the Lynx game against the Indiana Fever on August 25 was a "Pink Out" game at Target Center and on August 29, the 5th annual "Catwalk for a Cure" event was held at the Mall of America. The Lynx donated a $10,000 grant to the Edith Sanford Breast Cancer Foundation.
|- ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|APG ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|FG% |- | 1999 | B. Reed (16.4) | B. Reed (6.0) | Sonja Tate|S. Tate (3.1) | 63.6 vs 66.0 | 28.3 vs 32.1 | .389 vs .425 |-
|- ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|APG ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|FG% |- | 2000 | K. Smith (20.2) | B. Lennox (5.6) | K. Smith (2.8) | 68.5 vs 68.4 | 27.2 vs 30.5 | .421 vs .429 |- | 2001 | K. Smith (23.1) | S. Abrosimova (6.7) | K. Paye (3.0) | 64.9 vs 67.4 | 31.3 vs 31.8 | .371 vs .390 |- | 2002 | K. Smith (16.5) | T. Williams (7.4) | T. Moore (3.0) | 62.6 vs 65.8 | 30.0 vs 28.6 | .410 vs .413 |- | 2003 | K. Smith (18.2) | T. Williams (6.1) | T. Edwards (4.4) | 70.0 vs 69.7 | 31.7 vs 29.1 | .442 vs .425 |- | 2004 | K. Smith (18.8) | T. Williams (6.0) | H. Darling (3.5) | 63.7 vs 64.4 | 31.1 vs 30.5 | .404 vs .408 |- | 2005 | N. Ohlde (11.2) | N. Ohlde (5.7) | K. Harrower (2.8) | 65.0 vs 67.3 | 30.1 vs 31.0 | .412 vs .427 |- | 2006 | S. Augustus (21.9) | T. Williams (5.6) | A. Jacobs (3.4) | 74.2 vs 80.4 | 33.6 vs 35.4 | .427 vs .434 |- | 2007 | S. Augustus (22.6) | N. Ohlde (6.1) | N. Quinn (4.4) | 77.5 vs 80.9 | 34.8 vs 32.9 | .412 vs .450 |- | 2008 | S. Augustus (19.1) | N. Anosike (6.8) | L. Harding (3.2) | 81.4 vs 80.0 | 33.7 vs 35.6 | .430 vs .439 |- | 2009 | N. Anosike (13.2) | N. Anosike (7.4) | N. Anosike (2.7) | 80.3 vs 83.1 | 32.0 vs 34.3 | .420 vs .461 |-
|- ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|APG ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|FG% |- | 2010 | S. Augustus (16.9) | R. Brunson (10.3) | L. Whalen (5.6) | 78.7 vs 82.1 | 35.2 vs 34.9 | .397 vs .446 |- | 2011 | S. Augustus (16.2) | R. Brunson (8.9) | L. Whalen (5.9) | 81.5 vs 73.6 | 36.5 vs 30.1 | .461 vs .413 |- | 2012 | S. Augustus (16.6) | R. Brunson (8.9) | L. Whalen (5.4) | 86.0 vs 76.2 | 37.8 vs 30.9 | .473 vs .407 |- | 2013 | M. Moore (18.5) | R. Brunson (8.9) | L. Whalen (5.8) | 82.9 vs 73.5 | 36.9 vs 32.2 | .474 vs .405 |- | 2014 | M. Moore (23.9) | R. Brunson (8.2) | L. Whalen (5.5) | 81.6 vs 77.2 | 35.2 vs 32.6 | .467 vs .423 |- | 2015 | M. Moore (20.6) | S. Fowles (8.3) | L. Whalen (4.2) | 75.5 vs 71.7 | 35.3 vs 33.1 | .441 vs .414 |- | 2016 | M. Moore (19.3) | S. Fowles (8.5) | M. Moore (4.2) | 85.8 vs 77.0 | 35.8 vs 30.7 | .471 vs .417 |- |2017 | S. Fowles (18.9) | S. Fowles (10.4) | L. Whalen (4.1) | 85.4 vs 74.2 | 35.2 vs 30.2 | .478 vs .424 |- |2018 | M. Moore (18.0) | S. Fowles (11.9) | D. Robinson (3.3) | 78.9 vs 78.3 | 35.3 vs 31.1 | .451 vs .445 |- |2019 | O. Sims (14.5) | S. Fowles (8.9) | O. Sims (5.4) | 78.4 vs 75.9 | 34.0 vs 31.1 | .451 vs .434 |-
|- ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|APG ! style="width:8%;"|PPG ! style="width:8%;"|RPG ! style="width:8%;"|FG% |- | 2020 | C. Dangerfield (16.2) | S. Fowles (9.7) | C. Dangerfield (3.6) | 84.4 vs 80.6 | 34.4 vs 30.9 | .456 vs .447 |- | 2021 | N. Collier (16.2) | S. Fowles (10.1) | L. Clarendon (5.7) | 82.7 vs 78.7 | 34.9 vs 32.5 | .458 vs .424 |- | 2022 | S. Fowles & A. Powers (14.4) | S. Fowles (9.8) | M. Jefferson (4.9) | 82.4 vs 83.9 | 36.9 vs 32.4 | .450 vs .439 |- | 2023 | N. Collier (21.5) | N. Collier (8.5) | L. Allen (4.5) | 80.2 vs 85.0 | 34.3 vs 35.2 | .435 vs .446 |- | 2024 | N. Collier (20.4) | N. Collier (9.7) | C. Williams (5.5) | 82.0 vs 75.6 | 34.3 vs 35.3 | .448 vs .410 |- | 2025 | N. Collier (23.0) | N. Collier (7.4) | C. Williams (6.2) | 86.1 vs 76.7 | 34.2 vs 33.3 | .472 vs .423
Lynx games are broadcast on FanDuel Sports Network North. Broadcasters for the Lynx television games are Marney Gellner and Lea B. Olsen. Lynx games are carried on KFAN, and Wendell Epps broadcasts radio games (and iHeartRadio feeds). Beginning in 2025, 4 Lynx games are simulcast on NBC affiliate KARE.
Some Lynx games are broadcast nationally on ESPN, ESPN2, Ion Television(KPXM-TV), CBS(WCCO-TV), CBS Sports Network and ABC(KSTP-TV)