BIG LOSS FOR THE WNBA: Angel Reese has fired back at critics after suggesting she may sit out of the WNBA due to her $75,000 annual contract.
Angel Reese Warns WNBA About Potential Player Strike Ahead of CBA Negotiations
Reese attending an NFL game. / Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
When the WNBA Player’s Association in October 2024 opted out of its collective bargaining agreement with the league, the potential for a labor dispute—and possibly even a lockout—loomed.
That possibility became even more real after recent comments made by one of the league’s premier players, Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese. Reese, during an episode of her podcast, Unapologetically Angel, said that she’s heard that a player strike could occur if the league doesn’t acquiesce to what the Player’s Association wants.
“I need to be in the [players’ union] meetings because I’m hearing that if [the league] don’t give us what we want, we’re sitting out,” Reese said.
Fellow WNBA player and Dallas Wings star Dijonai Carrington, who was a guest on Reese’s show, agreed that a player strike is a “possibility.”
The WNBA experienced a boom in both viewership and ticket sales this past season, thanks in part to Reese and popular Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, each of whom were in their first seasons in the league. The league announced in September that 2,353,735 fans attended games this past season, the highest total in 22 years. An average of 657,000 fans tuned in to televised WNBA games, the highest number in 24 years.
And the uptick in viewership and ticket sales immediately paid dividends for the WNBA, which in July announced an 11-year media rights deal with Disney, Amazon Prime Video, and NBC Universal, one worth over $2.2 billion.
Under the old CBA, the players felt they weren’t getting a fair slice of the pie in terms of revenue sharing. Los Angeles Sparks star Kelsey Plum, among others, expressed a desire for the league to deploy a system of revenue sharing similar to the NBA’s model, where players and owners split the revenue 50-50.
Revenue sharing, as well as salaries, pensions, and child care and family planning benefits, are among the issues the players and league office will have to see eye-to-eye on to avoid a work stoppage.
The WNBA season begins on May 16. The league will play the ’25 season under the old CBA rules, but the clock is ticking on negotiations for a new CBA.
News
The Paradox of Failure: How Angel Reese’s Viral Struggles Created a Nightmare for Reebok
In the cutthroat world of sports endorsements, brands don’t just buy an athlete’s talent; they buy a narrative. They invest…
“Caitlin Clark Ignites Firestorm: Calls Out Brittney Griner’s Supporters Over Gender Double Standards, Dividing the WNBA Like Never Before!”
The WNBA has never been a stranger to controversy, but nothing could have prepared the league—or the world—for the nuclear…
Angel Reese rewrites WNBA history, prompting the President to make a controversial decision in the middle of the season. No long speeches, no frills — just 5 words that changed Angel Reese’s career forever.
Angel Reese rewrites WNBA history, prompting the President to make a controversial decision in the middle of the season. No…
Larry Bird Shakes World After He Grabs Caitlin Clark’s Mic On Live TV… Just Watch Her Reaction
Larry Bird’s Unfiltered Defense of Caitlyn Clark: A Cross-Generational Handoff Larry Bird, a Hall of Famer whose name is synonymous…
Basketball Icons Unite: Clark, Jordan, Bird Launch “Legends Academy”
In a groundbreaking moment that has sent shockwaves across the sports world, three of basketball’s most legendary and influential figures—rising…
Rick Ross’ $100M Miami Mansion Makeover: A Star Island Transformation
Rick Ross, the Miami Gardens rapper known for his extravagant lifestyle and impressive real estate portfolio, is turning heads once…
End of content
No more pages to load