After completing one of the greatest in-season turnarounds in WNBA history and sweeping the Phoenix Mercury in the Finals, A’ja Wilson may have not only cemented herself as the greatest women’s basketball player ever but also produced the greatest single season in WNBA history.
In the 2025 playoffs, the Las Vegas Aces looked nearly invincible. They won their third championship in four years, this time in a best-of-seven finals sweep of the Phoenix Mercury, with a 97–86 victory in Game four. Wilson averaged 28.5 points, 11.8 rebounds, four assists and two blocks across the series. She dropped 34 points, 14 rebounds and three blocks in Game three, drilling the game-winning jumper with 0.3 seconds left. Even when her shots weren’t falling, she dominated the paint and drew fouls. Her consistency under pressure — never signing off nights, never fading — was the engine of this playoff run. The Aces defended at a level few teams can touch, with Wilson anchoring their rim protection and identity.
The regular season told the prelude. After a brutal 53-point loss to the Minnesota Lynx sank them to 14–14, Las Vegas looked mortal. They answered with a 16-game win streak to close out the season, riding Wilson’s dominance and a restored mindset. Over that stretch, she averaged 26.1 points, 12 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 2.3 blocks and 1.6 steals while shooting 52.7% from the field, 59.3% from three and 89% from the line. That rollercoaster shaped the team’s identity and gave Wilson the narrative boost to claim MVP and Defensive Player of the Year. Adversity became fuel, and she led the response.
Individually, Wilson’s 2025 season stands alone. She became the first player in league history to win MVP, Defensive Player of the Year, scoring title and Finals MVP all in the same season. She also co-won Defensive Player of the Year with Alanna Smith. This is her third DPOY, the most by any player. She also broke the league record by becoming the first four-time MVP winner. She joined the likes of Cynthia Cooper, Sylvia Fowles, Lisa Leslie, Breanna Stewart and Diana Taurasi as players with multiple Finals MVPs. Her two-way impact — dominating both ends night after night — makes this campaign unmatched: she led in win shares, efficiency, defensive impact and consistency.
When compared to other all-time greats, this season ticks nearly every box. In the playoffs, she scored at a rate that led the postseason. Her player efficiency rating, win shares and advanced metrics all rank at historic peaks. Her ability to guard elite scorers, block shots and dominate the glass while sustaining an elite offensive game made this one of the most complete seasons ever. She was not a guard fueled by scoring explosions or a one-dimensional big; Wilson truly did it all. She never fouled out, stayed available and consistently elevated her teammates. Every frame of this season supports the argument that it is singular.
A dynasty is unfolding in real time and the continued rise of the greatest women’s basketball player ever is on display. Everything Wilson did before this year already made her one of the greats. But what she overcame this season — midyear doubts, deep playoff threats and peak moments of pressure — and how she delivered when it mattered most makes her legacy untouchable.
