Seattle Storm Tickets
All sporting event and WNBA
tickets are listed in the page of the home team. If you are looking for
Seattle Storm basketball tickets for an away game search for tickets on the
page of their opponent for the game you wish to purchase tickets.
Click here to buy
Seattle Storm Tickets
Seattle Storm
Ticket Inventory
Event Tickets Direct
sells Seattle Storm tickets. We specialize in tickets to WNBA Basketball
games and sold out events at low prices. If we don't have the tickets
that you are looking for in stock we will do our best to locate them in
our national database. In addition to regular season Storm tickets,
we also carry Seattle Storm Playoff tickets and tickets to the NBA Finals.
|
|
Seattle Storm Information
"The Seattle Storm stormed onto the WNBA landscape in 2000 as part of a league expansion that included Indiana, Miami and Portland. For the 2002 season, the team was excited to welcome number-one pick Sue Bird to Seattle. The point guard has won two NCAA titles with UConn. The Storm made the playoffs for the first time in 2002 but couldn't overcome the hot-shooting L.A. Sparks. Seattle lost Game 1, 78-61 and went on to lose the series in three games. The Storm’s main rivals include L.A., San Antonio, Sacramento and Phoenix."
Key Arena
"On April 24, 1996 women's basketball announced ""We Got Next"" as the NBA Board of Governors approved the concept of a Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) to begin play in June 1997. The first of the player signings was announced on Oct. 23, 1996 with Sheryl Swoopes and Rebecca Lobo joining the league. Eight teams were announced for the league's inaugural season. The Eastern Conference consisted of the Charlotte Sting, Cleveland Rockers, Houston Comets and New York Liberty while the Western Conference was comprised of the Los Angeles Sparks, Phoenix Mercury, Sacramento Monarchs and Utah Starzz. Since the inaugural season, the WNBA has expanded from eight teams to 16, with the Detroit Shock and Washington Mystics joining the league in 1998, the Minnesota Lynx and Orlando Miracle in 1999, and the Indiana Fever, Miami Sol, Portland Fire, and Seattle Storm in 2000. The 2000 season saw176 women play professional basketball in 256 regular season WNBA games. " |