WNBA All-Star voting results: Caitlin Clark, Aliyah Boston lead the way after second round of fan voting
· Yahoo Sports
Move over, A’ja Wilson, because Indiana Fever fans are looking to knock you off your pedestal. Fever fans showed up in a big way in the second round of All-Star voting results, pushing two members of the team ahead of Wilson in the voting.
That would be Aliyah Boston and Caitlin Clark, who now sit No. 1 and No. 2 — respectively — in All-Star voting, the league revealed Wednesday.
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Top 40 Leaders in the Second Fan Returns in WNBA All-Star Voting 2026 presented by Ally pic.twitter.com/1dk1QswBVA
— WNBA Communications (@WNBAComms) June 24, 2026
Boston now has 683,996 votes, giving her the top spot. Clark, Boston’s teammate, sits second with 670,510 votes.
Both players are more than deserving of an All-Star nod this season. Boston — who has made the All-Star team in each of her first three seasons in the WNBA — is off to a strong start, and is averaging a career-best 16.6 points per game so far.
Clark may have gotten off to a tepid start, but she’s now averaging a career-high 21.3 points and game and has a carer-high .426 field-goal percentage.
Wilson may have fallen out of the top spot — where she sat after the first round of fan voting — but she’s not too far behind. With 659,057 votes, Wilson sits third after the second round of voting. The four-time MVP doesn’t need anyone to make her All-Star Game case. She’s been as strong as ever this season.
The only other player to receive over 600,000 votes is Paige Bueckers. Behind her, Breanna Stewart is the only player to have 500,000 votes.
After Stewart, a number of players sit in the 400,000 vote range. They include Jessica Shepard, Angel Reese, Gabby Williams and Kelsey Mitchell.
Rounding out the top-10 is Olivia Miles, who has 397,080 votes.
Fan voting will count for 50 percent of the voting breakdown for the actual game. Players and a media panel will each have 25 percent of the voting breakdown.
As a way to incentivize voting, the WNBA will make Wednesday, June 24 a “2-for-1 day,” meaning any fan vote submitted will count twice. June 24 is the last date the WNBA will hold a “2-for-1 day” in the voting process.
The fan-voting portion for the All-Star Game ends June 27, so there isn’t much time left for fans to make their voices heard.
The 2026 WNBA All-Star Game will be played in Chicago on July 25 at the United Center.