The Detroit Shock is a professional women's basketball team that plays in the Women's National Basketball Association. The team started in 1998. The team is located in Detroit, Michigan.

Upon starting in 1998, the team quickly brought a blend of rookies and veterans, such as Sandy Brondello. (Brondello was later traded to the Miami Sol before the 2001 season.)

Detroit came in last place during the 2002 season, and former Detroit Pistons center Bill Laimbeer was brought in as coach. Laimbeer's ideas influenced the team's front management, which agreed with the new coach's idea bring over some new players he felt necessary to become a contender. Laimbeer predicted that the Shock would be league champions in 2003, and his prediction became a reality when they defeated the Los Angeles Sparks, two games to one, in the 2003 WNBA Finals. The final score in the championship game that year was Shock 83, Sparks 78. Detroit, much like the 1991 Minnesota Twins in baseball, became the first team in WNBA history to make it from last place to WNBA champions the next year, and the Shock also became the second Eastern conference team to win the championship in WNBA history ( The Houston Comets were in the Eastern Conference in 1997).

Home Court

  • The Palace at Auburn Hills

Uniform
  • White with the team's logo of the stylized Detroit Shock name, in black and blue, over a WNBA basketball at home . Orange with the same logo and style on the road.

WNBA Championships Hall of Famers

'Notable Past Players

  • Sandy Brondello

Current Stars
  • Swim Cash
  • Cheryl Ford (daughter of Karl Malone)
  • Kedra Holland-Corn
  • Deanna Nolan
  • Ruth Riley