Rebecca Lobo

Rebecca Lobo

Women's Basketball Analyst

Rebecca Lobo joined ESPN in 2004 as a WNBA and women’s college basketball analyst and reporter. The former WNBA All-Star and championship winning college basketball player contributes to ESPN’s live women’s basketball events and studio shows.

As team captain her senior year, Lobo led the University of Connecticut to a perfect season in 1995. The Huskies were undefeated in 28 regular-season games and defeated Tennessee in the NCAA Championship that year to go 35-0.

Lobo gained many accolades off the court as well. In 1995 she was named Female Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press, NCAA Women’s Basketball Player of the Year; Woman of the Year by the Women’s Sports Foundation, and she also received an ESPY for Outstanding Female Athlete. Lobo was named a Rhodes Scholar candidate, the 1995 Academic All-America of the Year in women’s basketball and the Co-Academic All-America of the Year for all teams in the University Division.

A member of the 1996 U.S. Women’s Basketball Olympic Team during the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, the team won a gold medal. The following year in 1997, the WNBA began its inaugural season, which Lobo was one of the first players to sign with one of its franchises – the New York Liberty. She played with the Liberty until 2002 then went on to play for the Houston Comets and ultimately retired with the Connecticut Sun in 2003.

For her outstanding performance in and out of the classroom as a student-athlete, in June 2008, Lobo was inducted into the College Sports Information Directors of America Academic All-America Hall of Fame.

In 2010, Lobo was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in Knoxville, Tenn. In 2017, Lobo was named to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Lobo has been actively involved in the community with various philanthropic endeavors, including founding the RuthAnn and Rebecca Lobo Scholarship in Allied Health at UConn. She has served on UConn’s board of trustees since 2004.

Lobo and her mother RuthAnn collaborated in 1996 on a book entitled The Home Team: Of Mothers, Daughters, and American Champions. The book covers Lobo’s career as well as her late mother’s battle with breast cancer. She also contributed a short story to an anthology entitled 33 Things Every Girl Should Know.

Lobo was born in Hartford, Conn., and raised in Southwick, Mass. She earned her bachelor of arts degree in liberal arts and sciences from UConn.

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