FeedbackBrittney Griner Grades & Analysis — C | Connecticut Sun | FanVerdicts
Brittney Griner
#42C · Connecticut Sun
Height
6'9"
Weight
205 lbs
Age
35
College
Baylor
Experience
12 yrs
B-
Top 38%
Performance
A+
Top 3%
Sentiment
F
Bottom 5%
Contract Value Index
N/A
Fan Verdict
WNBA Performance is graded on per-game box production relative to position.
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The Verdict in One Read
Brittney Griner earns a B- Performance grade, ranking #9 of 17 Centers on the FanVerdicts board.
Performance
B-
#9 of 17 Centers
ReplacementSolidElite
Brittney Griner earns a B- Performance grade, placing her in the solid-starter-to-above-average tier for her position—a realistic assessment for a 35-year-old veteran managing limited availability in her first season with Connecticut. The standout element here is her elite ball security and two-way framework: across five games in the 2026 season, she's posting 1.2 BPG and 0.8 SPG while maintaining a clean 51.1% FG, a rate that reflects efficient offensive touch despite her zero three-point attempts. The core limitation is durability, with just five games played so far—enough to show she can still produce at volume (12.2 PPG, 4.6 RPG), but not enough to establish consistency or confirm she can stay healthy across a full WNBA schedule. Her role on the Sun appears to be exactly what the data suggests: a rim-running, pick-and-roll anchor who prioritizes efficiency and defense over high-volume scoring, a natural fit for a longtime veteran seeking to extend her career at the highest level. The mediaFraming—anchored by her 6,000 career points, two Defensive Player of the Year awards, and ten All-Star selections—confirms she remains a franchise cornerstone and future Hall-of-Famer despite her age, a perception wholly supported by the franchise's marquee free-agent commitment. If she can sustain the 51%-FG baseline and stay on the court for 20+ games, this grade could trend upward; until then, early-season output suggests she's still a credible two-way force in a reduced workload.
Brittney Griner earns an F Contract Value Index (CVI) — a stark downgrade that reflects the brutal math of age, durability, and WNBA salary economics rather than any diminishment of her legacy. Through five games in the 2026 season, she's averaging 12.2 PPG, 4.6 RPG, and 2.0 APG on efficient 51.1% shooting, but the limited sample—just five contests—underscores the elephant in the room: at 35, a longtime veteran on a near-max salary tier deal worth $1.19M over one year, Griner is being paid as if she can deliver the two-way dominance that earned her ten All-Star selections and two Defensive Player of the Year awards. The WNBA market has evolved, and while her historical standing as a future Hall-of-Famer and franchise cornerstone remains unquestioned in the media narrative, the gap between her compensation and her actual on-court availability and production output is now untenable from a roster-construction standpoint. A one-year, near-max commitment to a 35-year-old center—no matter how decorated—represents poor asset allocation in a league where salary cap flexibility is a scarcity. The CVI floor reflects not disrespect for her institutional value, but rather the hard reality that Connecticut made a legacy signing rather than a competitive bet. Unless durability and full-season production materially improve from this five-game baseline, this deal will remain an anchor constraint on the roster.
Current Sentiment
A+
NegativeNeutralPositive
Brittney Griner enters the 2026 season as one of the WNBA's most decorated and respected centers, with a resume anchored by two Defensive Player of the Year awards, ten All-Star selections, and now 6,000 career points—a milestone that places her among the league's all-time greats. Her recent signing with the Connecticut Sun as a marquee free-agent acquisition signals both her continued elite status and the franchise's confidence in her ability to anchor a contender. The overwhelmingly positive coverage surrounding her milestone achievement and roster commitment reflects sustained recognition of her two-way dominance and institutional value. Media and fan perception remains decidedly favorable, with narratives centered on historical accomplishment rather than decline or controversy. Griner's perception heading into 2026 reflects the standing of a franchise cornerstone and future Hall-of-Famer in the prime of her legacy.