Bridget Carleton was the first overall pick in the WNBA’s expansion draft — and the Canadian national isn’t headed to the Toronto Tempo.

The Portland Fire and Toronto finally have players for their inaugural season, and the draft started with a surprise, with the Fire selecting the best available Canadian player. Carleton was a starter in Minnesota the last two seasons as the Lynx advanced to the WNBA Finals in 2024 and had the league’s best record in 2025.

Starting with Carleton, the draft had a decidedly international flair at the top. The second pick was Belgian point guard Julie Allemand from the Los Angeles Sparks, followed by France’s Carla Leite from the Golden State Valkyries to the Fire, Germany’s Nyara Sabally from the New York Liberty to Toronto and fellow German Luisa Geiselsöder from the Dallas Wings to Portland. The first American player selected was Marina Mabrey from the Connecticut Sun at sixth overall to the Tempo.

Here are the full rosters for both new teams in order of selection.

Toronto Tempo

PlayerPositionFormer team

Julie Allemand

Guard

Los Angeles Sparks

Nyara Sabally

Center

New York Liberty

Marina Mabrey

Guard/Forward

Connecticut Sun

Aaliyah Nye

Guard/Forward

Las Vegas Aces

Lexi Held

Guard

Phoenix Mercury

Maria Conde

Forward

Golden State Valkyries

Maria Kliundikova

Forward/Center

Minnesota Lynx

Adja Kane

Forward

New York Liberty

Nikolina Milic

Forward/Center

Connecticut Sun

Kitika Laksa

Guard/Forward

Phoenix Mercury

Kristy Wallace

Guard/Forward

Indiana Fever

Portland Fire roster

PlayerPositionFormer Team

Bridget Carleton

Guard/Forward

Minnesota Lynx

Carla Leite

Guard

Golden State Valkyries

Luisa Geiselsoder

Forward/Center

Dallas Wings

Emily Engstler

Forward

Washington Mystics

Maya Caldwell

Guard/Forward

Atlanta Dream

Chloe Bibby

Forward

Indiana Fever

Haley Jones

Guard/Forward

Dallas Wings

Nyadiew Puoch

Guard/Forward

Atlanta Dream

Sarah Ashlee Barker

Guard/Forward

Los Angeles Sparks

Sug Sutton

Guard/Forward

Washington Mystics

Nika Mühl

Guard

Seattle Storm

The Fire and the Tempo each had the option of picking up to 12 players and selected 11 apiece, just as the Valkyries did during their 2024 expansion draft. Other than the Chicago Sky, which made a pair of pre-draft trades to avoid losing any players, every team had at least one player taken. The Las Vegas Aces and Seattle Storm lost one player each, while the other 10 returning WNBA teams had two players selected in the expansion draft.

Toronto head coach Sandy Brondello reunites with Sabally, who she won a title with in New York in 2024, and also Australian national Kristy Wallace, who won a bronze medal under Brondello at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Portland general manager Vanja Černivec was part of the Golden State front office that selected Leite in last season’s expansion draft. Now, the 21-year-old point guard joins Černivec again on the Fire.

A few teammate pairings remained together in the draft process. Phoenix’s Lexi Held and Kitija Laksa are both headed to Toronto, Washington’s Emily Engstler and Sug Sutton were both drafted by Portland and the Fire also have the Wings duo of Geiselsöder and Haley Jones.

“Today is an important step in building the foundation of the Toronto Tempo,” Tempo general manager Monica Wright Rogers said in a statement. “Our goal was to construct a roster that reflects the style of play and culture we want to establish — one that balances competitiveness with long-term flexibility, and features players who bring versatility, toughness and winning experience. This group gives us the ability to compete from day one while continuing to build, and embraces the opportunity to help shape something new in a new country as Canada’s first WNBA team.”

In total, five players currently under contract moved teams. The remainder are mostly reserved or restricted free agents, meaning their new teams now have negotiating rights over those players. Carleton and Mabrey are both unrestricted free agents and not bound to the teams that selected them unless they are cored, in which case Portland and Toronto will have exclusive negotiating rights in free agency.