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Christopher Boan has been covering sports and sports betting for more than seven years, including stops at ArizonaSports.com, the Tucson Weekly and the Green Valley News.
With the WNBA regular season tipping off in just under a month, BetGeorgia.com pulled the current average ages of each WNBA team after the 2025 Draft, per ESPN, to find out which five teams are the oldest ahead of the 2025 season across Georgia sports betting. Based on our findings, the Atlanta Dream are smack dab in the middle of ages – ranking as the seventh oldest roster with an average age of 26.47.
Rank | Team | Average Age |
1 | Indiana Fever | 27.67 |
2 | Las Vegas Aces | 27.44 |
3 | Seattle Storm | 27.00 |
4 | New York Liberty | 26.83 |
5 | Chicago Sky | 26.70 |
Leading the way in the 13-team WNBA this season, age-wise, is the Indiana Fever, who will lean on second-year guard and 2024 WNBA Draft top pick Caitlin Clark and 2023 top selection Aliyah Boston in the paint this season, along with veterans like Natasha Howard, DeWanna Bonner and Kelsey Mitchell.
Of the lot, Bonner has the most experience in the league, having played 502 games across 15 seasons with the Phoenix Mercury, Connecticut Sun and now the Fever, while Howard (336 games played across 11 seasons) and Mitchell (233 games played across eight seasons) add additional seasoning to the club’s roster.
Other WNBA rosters that are long in the tooth this season include the Las Vegas Aces, who have an average roster age of 27.44, followed by the Seattle Storm (27.00), New York Liberty (26.83) and the Chicago Sky (26.70), though none can offer the type of on-court experience that Indiana has at its disposal in 2025.
This WNBA season, it seems like age might be the key ingredient for success, as the Liberty enter the season as the WNBA title frontrunner on DraftKings Sportsbook, at +220, while the Aces are right behind them at +330 and the Fever enter the year in the No. 4 position at +400, while the Storm (+5000) and Sky (+8000) are further down the list, odds wise.
What we do know for now is that few WNBA teams will trot out the type of hardwood institutional knowledge that Indiana will in 2025, with a host of experienced players suiting up for a team that made the postseason for the first time since 2016 in 2024, with a host of veteran players looking to help Boston and Clark’s push for a championship in the Hoosier State this summer.
USA Today photo by Grace Hollars/IndyStar.
Author
Christopher Boan has been covering sports and sports betting for more than seven years, including stops at ArizonaSports.com, the Tucson Weekly and the Green Valley News.
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