Superstar rookies Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese have been credited with the WNBA’s massive surge in popularity, but neither of their teams – the Indiana Fever or the Chicago Sky – are the league’s wealthiest. 

Rather, the Dallas Wings, who are tied for last place this season, are the most valuable franchise in the league at $208 million, Front Office Sports reported Monday.

The value reportedly has surged more than $100 million in the aftermath of two investors recently buying a 1 percent stake in the team at $2.08 million.

Greg Bibb, the Wings’ CEO and part-owner, sold the 1 percent stake to businessmen Jed Kaplan and Randy Eisenman.

In June, Sportico valued the Wings at $75 million, the 11th-highest total in the WNBA. The defending champion Las Vegas Aces were the No. 1 team at $140 million.

The most valuable WNBA team has been revealed, and it's not Caitlin Clark's Indiana Fever

The most valuable WNBA team has been revealed, and it’s not Caitlin Clark’s Indiana Fever

The Dallas Wings are the wealthiest franchise in the league, worth $208 million

The Dallas Wings are the wealthiest franchise in the league, worth $208 million

The Wings are 6-19 this year, tied with the Washington Mystics.

‘I would say the value of anything is what the market’s willing to pay,’ Bibb told Sports Business Journal.

‘I can make a compelling case for why that $208 million number is justifiable.’

Kaplan is a minority owner of the Memphis Grizzlies of the NBA, and Eisenman founded a local hedge fund.

Their investment reportedly comes amid an off-court surge for the Wings, including a presumptive new TV contract and getting the franchise a $19 million incentive from the city of Dallas to move in 2026 from their current arena – College Park Center at the University of Texas at Arlington – to a refurbished Memorial Coliseum in downtown Dallas.

The Coliseum has a seating capacity of 8,500 compared with College Park Center at just over 6,000.

Meanwhile, the WNBA as a whole has experienced a huge boost in ratings, merchandise sales and attendance at games in 2024.

Clark and fellow rookie Angel Reese helped the WNBA record a 1000% increase in merch sales

Clark and fellow rookie Angel Reese helped the WNBA record a 1000% increase in merch sales

The WNBA has also inked a new media rights package worth about $2.2 billion over 11 years

The WNBA has also inked a new media rights package worth about $2.2 billion over 11 years

A superstar rookie class, led by Clark and Reese, has given the sport a huge boost in 2024

A superstar rookie class, led by Clark and Reese, has given the sport a huge boost in 2024

The league also inked a new media rights package in July worth about $2.2 billion over 11 years, The Athletic reported.

It nets out to approximately $200 million annually, roughly four times the WNBA’s current media deals with Disney, Ion, CBS and Amazon, which are valued at $50 million annually.

Several records have already been smashed throughout this WNBA season alone, with the league announcing last month that more than 400,000 fans attended games in May – the most in 26 years.

Additionally, the league’s viewership has increased greatly since Clark and Reese’s arrival.

Across ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, and CBS, WNBA games are averaging 1.32 million viewers – which is nearly triple last season’s standard of 462,200 viewers.