The Perth Lynx are an Australian professional basketball team based in Perth, Western Australia. The Lynx compete in the Women's National Basketball League (WNBL) and play their home games at Perth High Performance Centre. For sponsorship reasons, they are known as the Northern Star Resources Perth Lynx.
The Lynx were established in 1988 as the Perth Breakers. After being owned and operated by Basketball Western Australia from 2001 to 2015, the Perth Wildcats took over ownership and operation of the team for a period of five years. In 2020, the licence was transferred back to Basketball Western Australia. In 2024, the licence was transferred to Sports Entertainment Group's sporting teams business, SEN Teams. The Lynx have reached six WNBL Grand Finals, winning their only championship in 1992.
In 1987, the team was known as the WAIS Rockets. For WA to be admitted to the WNBL, the state was told that the Rockets had to win the 1987 WBC title. That year, the Rockets played all of their games away from home including finals, finishing on top of the ladder with a 10–1 record and beating the Forestville Eagles in overtime to advance to the grand final, where they won the title 56–47 against the Knox Raiders. The Rockets featured Tanya Fisher and Cheryl Kickett-Tucker.
In the 1989 WNBL season, the Breakers amassed a 9–8 record over the first half of the season. As a consequence of the 1989 pilot strike, the team withdrew from the season and their record was deleted from the ladder. The Breakers returned to action in the 1990 season. After playing at the Superdrome in Mount Claremont over their first two seasons, the side returned to its original venue at Perry Lakes Basketball Stadium.
The Breakers appeared in the WNBL finals every year between 1991 and 2000 except 1997, making grand final appearances in 1992, 1993 and 1999.
In the 1992 season, the Breakers won the WNBL championship behind captain Michele Timms and coach Tom Maher, along with Robyn Maher, Tanya Fisher, Natasha Bargeus, Lisa MacLean, Marynne Briggs and Marianna Vlahov. They defeated the Dandenong Rangers 58–54 in the grand final. Tom Maher won the Coach of the year award; Robyn Maher was the league's Best Defensive Player, and Timms was recognised as the league's number one point guard.
In 1993, the Breakers made the Perth Entertainment Centre their new home venue. Under coach Guy Molloy, the Breakers returned to the grand final but lost 65–64 to the Sydney Flames.
In the 2000–01 season, the Breakers split their home games between Perry Lakes Stadium and Challenge Stadium.
Basketball WA lacked money to pay players and coaches. The players had to pay for their own gym memberships and maintained full-time jobs. They also travelled on game day or took midnight flights to save money. Despite the challenges, Perth won four games in 2001–02 and six in 2002–03. The Lynx played exclusively at Perry Lakes Stadium in 2001–02.
After finishing last on the ladder in the 2009–10 WNBL season with a 2–20 record, the team was rebranded as the West Coast Waves for the 2010–11 WNBL season. The change symbolised the reinvigoration of the Basketball WA program under experienced head coach David Herbert and home-grown legend Tully Bevilaqua, and gave a nod to the team's history with the reintroduction of the black, green and gold colours. The Waves also debuted at the newly opened WA Basketball Centre.
In 14 seasons under Basketball WA, the team failed to make a finals appearance.
In the 2015–16 season, the Lynx qualified for the finals for the first time since 2000. They went on to reach the grand final, their first since 1999, where they lost 2–0 to the Townsville Fire.
In the 2017–18 season, the Lynx won 14 consecutive games throughout the season and finished on top of the ladder, before losing four matches in a row after enduring seven flights in eight days. They lost to Canberra and Townsville in the final weekend of the regular season and were then swept 2–0 by fourth-placed Melbourne in the semi-finals.
In March 2018, the licence agreement with the Wildcats was extended.
In the 2021–22 season, the Lynx finished in second place with an 11–5 record and reached the grand final, where they lost the series 2–1 to the Melbourne Boomers despite winning game one in Melbourne.
In the 2023–24 season, the Lynx finished in fourth place with an 11–10 record and defeated the first-placed Townsville Fire in the semi-finals to reach their second grand final series in three years. The Lynx won 101–79 in game one of the grand final series against the Southside Flyers. They became only the second team to ever score 100 points in a WNBL grand final and finished the game with 22 three-pointers. They went on to finish runners-up after losing game two 97–95 and game three 115–81. In the game two grand final game at Bendat Basketball Centre, the Lynx set a club record attendance of 1,753.
During the pre-season in the lead up to the 2024–25 WNBL season, the Lynx played two games as part of HoopsFest at RAC Arena. During the 2024–25 regular season, the Lynx split their home games between Bendat Basketball Centre and the 4,000-capacity Perth High Performance Centre. They played three games at Perth High Performance Centre and made the venue their training base.
In June 2025, it was announced that all Lynx home games in the 2025–26 WNBL season would be played at Perth High Performance Centre. The following month, the club underwent a rebrand with a new logo. Following the mid-season addition of Chinese center Han Xu, the Lynx achieved a record crowd for Han's first home game at Perth HPC, with 3,121 fans attending the 98–81 win over the Southside Melbourne Flyers on 5 December 2025. The previous club record attendance was 1,753. On 15 January 2026, the Lynx played their first ever regular season game at RAC Arena as part of HoopsFest in Perth, winning 85–81 over the Bendigo Spirit.
!colspan=2 style="background:#eee;" | Regular season | 297 | 455 | 2 Minor Premierships | ||
!colspan=2 style="background:#eee;" | Finals | 16 | 25 | 1 WNBL Championship | ||
Source: Year By Year
| WNBL Championships: | 1 (1992) |
| WNBL Finals appearances: | 17 (1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025) |
| WNBL Grand Final appearances: | 6 (1992, 1993, 1999, 2016, 2022, 2024) |
| WNBL Grand Final MVPs: | Tanya Fisher (1992) |
| All-WNBL Team: | Michele Timms (1991, 1992, 1994), Gina Stevens (1996, 1999), Deanna Smith (2006, 2009), Carly Wilson (2007), Sami Whitcomb (2016, 2017, 2018, 2023), Courtney Williams (2018), Asia Taylor (2019), Katie-Rae Ebzery (2019–20, 2020), Jackie Young (2022), Alex Wilson (2025), Laeticia Amihere (2025) |
| All-WNBL Team: | Marina Mabrey (2022), Lauren Scherf (2023), Aari McDonald (2024), Amy Atwell (2024), Miela Sowah (2025), Anneli Maley (2025) |
| WNBL Coach of the Year: | Tom Maher (1992), Guy Molloy (1995), Andy Stewart (2016, 2018), Ryan Petrik (2022) |
| WNBL Defensive Player of the Year: | Robyn Maher (1992), Tully Bevilaqua (1995, 1996, 1997, 2000) |
| WNBL Sixth Woman of the Year: | Alison Schwagmeyer (2019–20) |
| WNBL Leading Scorer: | Gina Stevens (1996), Deanna Smith (2006), Sami Whitcomb (2017), Asia Taylor (2019), Aari McDonald (2024) |
| Retired numbers: | 4 – Tina Christie, 13 – Melissa Sinfield, 14 – Melissa Marsh, 41 – Tully Bevilaqua |
Source: Perth Lynx Achievements
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