Fertitta Family Snaps Up WNBA's Connecticut Sun, Plans 2027 Houston Move

The Fertitta family, owners of the NBA's Houston Rockets, have acquired the WNBA's Connecticut Sun and intend to relocate the team to Houston in 2027, reviving the Houston Comets name.
In a major shakeup for the WNBA, the Fertitta family, known for owning the NBA's Houston Rockets, has purchased the Connecticut Sun with plans to move the team to Houston starting in the 2027 season. The upcoming 2026 season will be the last for the Sun in their current Connecticut home, which they've occupied since 2003.
According to reports from PaperCity Magazine and ESPN, the Fertittas will rebrand the team as the Houston Comets, reviving the name of Houston's previous WNBA franchise. The reported $300 million deal marks a significant investment by the Fertitta family in women's professional basketball.
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The move will bring the WNBA back to Houston for the first time since the Comets folded in 2008 after winning four league championships in the league's first eight seasons. Fans in the city have long clamored for the return of professional women's basketball, and the Fertittas' acquisition of the Sun appears poised to fulfill that desire.
For the Connecticut Sun, the upcoming 2026 season will serve as a farewell tour before the franchise departs for its new home in Houston. The team has found success in recent years, making the WNBA playoffs in six of the last eight seasons, including a trip to the Finals in 2022.
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The Fertitta family's acquisition of the Sun represents a significant shift in the WNBA landscape, as one of the league's more successful franchises relocates to a major market with a rich basketball history. The move will undoubtedly generate excitement among Houston sports fans, who will eagerly await the Comets' return to the court in 2027.
As the Connecticut Sun prepare for their final season in the state, the WNBA community will be watching closely to see how the team's relocation and rebranding unfolds, paving the way for a new era of women's basketball in Houston.
Source: The Guardian


