The 20th WNBA All-Star Game takes place at Footprint Center, home of the Phoenix Mercury, and for the second time the game's format will be altered by the upcoming Olympics.
See below for everything you need to know about this year’s midseason classic.
The WNBA All-Star Game will take place on Saturday, July 20 at 8:30 PM ET.
A skills challenge and a 3-point contest will take place the day prior on Friday, July 19 at 6 PM ET.
With the 2024 Olympics coming up later this month, this year’s game will not be a traditional contest pitting the best of the Eastern Conference against the best of the Western Conference.
Instead, just as ahead of the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, there will be a contest between Team WNBA and the US national team.
Team WNBA: Clark (Indiana Fever), Kelsey Mitchell (Indiana Fever), Aliyah Boston (Indiana Fever), DeWanna Bonner (Connecticut Sun), Brionna Jones (Connecticut Sun), Allisha Gray (Atlanta Dream), Dearica Hamby (Los Angeles Sparks), Kayla McBride (Minnesota Lynx), Arike Ogunbowale (Dallas Wings), Nneka Oqwumike (Seattle Storm), Jonquel Jones (New York Liberty), Reese (Chicago Sky).
Team USA: A’ja Wilson (Las Vegas Aces), Jackie Young (Las Vegas Aces), Kelsey Plum (Las Vegas Aces), Chelsea Gray (Las Vegas Aces), Napheesa Collier (Minnesota Lynx), Kahleah Copper (Phoenix Mercury), Brittney Griner (Phoenix Mercury), Taurasi (Phoenix Mercury), Breanna Stewart (New York Liberty), Sabrina Ionescu (New York Liberty), Jewell Lloyd (Seattle Storm), Alyssa Thomas (Connecticut Sun).
Read USA Women's Basketball Olympics roster, schedule, odds & more on site.
The 2024 WNBA All-Star Game will air on ABC. You can stream the game on ESPN.com or the ESPN app, or use FuboTV, which offers a free trial.
The WNBA collected hundreds of thousands of votes from fans, players, and media to help decide the 2024 All-Star Game roster.
Fan voting accounted for 50%, followed by WNBA player votes and votes from basketball media (25% each).
The top-10 vote-getters were automatically named to the All-Star Game, and every player not on Team USA’s roster for the Olympics joined Team WNBA.
The next 36 highest vote-getters were provided to the 12 WNBA head coaches, who gave their votes on that pool of players to fill the remaining spots on Team WNBA.
Clark was the top vote-getter with 700,735 votes, followed by Boston (618,680), Wilson (607,300), Stewart (424,135) and Reese (381,518).