NEW YORK — Kelsey Plum mentioned that whereas the gamers’ union ought to proceed to barter a brand new collective bargaining settlement, she believes the supply the WNBPA has acquired from the WNBA to date displays a “important win” and that “a strike can be the worst factor for each side.”
“I need to play, and gamers need to play,” Plum, the WNBPA first vice chairman, mentioned at Unmatched shootaround previous to Monday night time’s semifinal video games in Brooklyn. “And so clearly we’ll proceed to barter and do all the things we presumably can to get this achieved in a well timed trend. However clearly a strike can be the worst factor for each side, as a result of we’re in a income [sharing system], so no income, no income to share.”
The 2 sides have been far aside on income sharing as they work towards a brand new CBA — a course of that began practically 17 months in the past when the WNBPA opted out of the earlier settlement. The WNBPA is asking for a system by which gamers obtain on common 26% of gross income (earlier than deducting bills), whereas the league has been providing a system by which the gamers obtain 70% of web income (after deducting bills).
The gamers’ union has bristled on the league’s supply because it quantities to lower than 15% of gross income, whereas the league has known as the WNBPA’s proposals “unrealistic” and claimed they’d quantity to lots of of thousands and thousands of {dollars} in losses.
Plum mentioned that getting the league to conform to a income sharing system for the primary time — the place gamers’ salaries will develop as each league and staff income grows — is one thing “we fought actually onerous for,” and that the WNBPA can proceed to barter the expense credit the league would get.
“You possibly can proceed to barter with out putting,” Plum mentioned. “… I’ve all the time been somebody that is centered on the acquire, not the hole. And to be trustworthy, I believe for those who take a look at the place we have come from, shoot, since I got here into the league till now, and now that we’re in a income share, it is a large win.
“Clearly, we’ll proceed to barter. I can not emphasize that sufficient. Like we’re not simply settling. I need to be very clear about that. However I am tremendous proud to be part of this chance to vary ladies’s sports activities.”
WNBPA vice chairman Breanna Stewart, who co-founded the 3-on-3 Unmatched league, mentioned she agrees with Plum.
“I believe that whereas we nonetheless are combating for lots of various issues, now we have to understand that the rev share is a win, particularly simply even coming from the 2020 CBA and those earlier than that,” Stewart mentioned. “Now, because the league makes cash, we earn cash. And so when [Plum] talks about ‘I do not suppose a strike is nice for anybody,’ as a result of because the league loses cash, or if now we have a delay, we additionally lose cash.”
The WNBPA participant physique licensed the seven-player govt committee, which incorporates Plum and Stewart, to authorize a strike “when crucial” in December. That risk has lingered with each side nonetheless not seeing eye to eye and the WNBA common season scheduled to begin Could 8. Final week, the league gave the WNBPA a goal date of March 10 to have a time period sheet accomplished or else the season schedule might be impacted.
A supply advised ESPN that in a participant name Tuesday, greater than half of participant management reaffirmed their need to maintain a strike on the desk as a possible plan of action, however Stewart and Plum’s public feedback point out on the very least that there’s not a consensus.
Following a six-week stalemate to begin the yr, when the league didn’t reply to a WNBPA supply, each side have exchanged a flurry of proposals over the previous month. After the WNBPA submitted a counterproposal on Friday, the league responded with one in every of its personal on Sunday.
The league’s new supply proposes accelerating most contract eligibility for star gamers on rookie-scale contracts, sources acquainted with the negotiations advised ESPN. All-WNBA first- and second-team gamers who’re nonetheless on rookie offers would grow to be eligible to signal a most contract of their fourth yr, after which they’d not be eligible for the core designation. A participant on a rookie deal who earns MVP may be eligible for a supermax deal and to not be cored.
For instance, that may imply the previous three No. 1 general picks — Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers — would grow to be max-contract eligible in 2026, 2027 and 2028, respectively. The union has been asking to remove the core designation and to scale back the size of rookie-scale contracts from 4 years to 3.
The league’s income share proposal stays the identical as earlier ones, although the cap in Yr 1 was bumped from $5.65 million to $5.75 million, up from $1.5 million in 2025. Based mostly on conservative league projections, the wage cap will develop to roughly $8.5 million by Yr 6 of the deal, sources advised ESPN.
The league’s proposal options most salaries, together with income sharing payouts, amounting to just about $1.3 million in 2026 and projecting to method $2 million in 2031. The supermax in 2025 got here in at $249,000. The typical participant wage, together with income sharing, can be projected to achieve $540,000 in 2026 and $780,000 by 2031, up from $120,000 in 2025, whereas the projected minimal wage would soar from $66,000 in 2025 to over $230,000 in 2026.

















































