Author Topic: Pay us what you owe us.  (Read 2840 times)

greg683x and 0 Guests are viewing this topic.

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #15 on: July 21, 2025, 09:32:31 AM »

Offline gift

  • NCE
  • Antoine Walker
  • ****
  • Posts: 4084
  • Tommy Points: 297
perhaps a deal could be struck whereby the players contribute (via lower salaries) to future equity (not real equity in the franchises, but equity in future royalties).

this way, the players can take on some of the "investment" which justifies manageable current salaries and also justifies automatic increases in their profit share if certain growth is attained.

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #16 on: July 21, 2025, 09:35:34 AM »

Offline Kernewek

  • Antoine Walker
  • ****
  • Posts: 4684
  • Tommy Points: 298
  • International Superstar
I've come around on the WNBA.

I have no doubts on the validity of the "they've never made a profit" thing before last year. But with Caitlin Clark, the Valkyries, rapid expansion, and even other leagues (like Unrivalved) coming around, ownership's claims of "not profitable" aren't making a lot of sense to me.

So we all know about the Caitlin Clark impact (Goldstar88 just posted some facts), and those numbers appear to be before the Valkyries existed, and the Valkyries have sold out every game this year, selling more tickets than the Fever (at least to their home games). League ratings and attendance continue to rise in Clark's 2nd season, despite her missing almost half her games so far. Multiple shoe companies (Nike, Puma, Reebok) are giving WNBA players signature shoes. The WNBA All Star game sold out. The TD Garden has sold out 2 years in a row for a visiting WNBA game, etc. This all points to a positive money making situation.

Then you have to consider Unrivaled. According to Unrivaled execs, they "almost broke even" in their first season, and expect to be profitable in their second season. If a start up women's league, paying higher salaries, can achieve profitability so quickly, what does that say about the WNBA?

I think the biggest argument for profitability is the investment dollars fighting to come in. The Valkyries paid $50m to enter the league and are already estimated to be worth $500m in their first season (though I always take those valuations with a grain of salt, plus the Valkyries are an outlier because of their arena situation, but league average value is still reported at $269m, with the lowest being $165m). On top of that, 11 cities just bid for expansion teams. Cities that previously had WNBA teams (Cleveland, Detroit, Charlotte, Houston) want to bring them back. That doesn't really depict a poor current financial situation.

Then there's Hollywood accounting. Now there's no verified "league lost money" numbers out there, only what league ownership has put out there, and league ownership has every reason to claim they're not making money, but profitability is really a complicated thing, and profitable companies can be made to look unprofitable. Probably a better number to be looking at is operating cash flow. For profitability, the league could be carrying losses on their books from previous years, or be using the increase in capital expenditures (several teams have or are planning to open dedicated WNBA practice facilities) or having parent NBA charging their WNBA subsidiary teams some weird fees or high loan rates to themselves, etc. Show me their current cash flow numbers, and I bet they're positive.

But even if the WNBA is currently losing money (which I'm very skeptical of), they could shut it all down tomorrow and there would be a ton of investors ready to jump in and pick things up. The money train has just started leaving the station, no way the owners are willing to shut it down now. And that shows that the players deserve a lot more money. The owners can claim poverty all they want, but I don't believe they're willing to give up the money the WNBA is now making them.
This is it. I also think it would be weird if the WNBA players weren't advocating for more money during the CBA negotiations - that's kind of the whole point.
Of course and it would be weird if ownership weren't looking to restrain spending (salary increases, etc) especially when the league has lost money for so long.  I haven't read any specifics about the ownership offer and player demands so it is hard to know how reasonable both sides are being. 

As for the shirts, the players are being paid what they are owed based on their current contract.  The owners won't owe they anything more until a new contract is signed.

Yeah that's fair - the shirts are obviously designed for the optics of the discussion, and to influence the ongoing conversations here and elsewhere - but that's true of every aspect of the conversation, as bdm points out.

I'm not up-to-date on who owns which franchise, but I think most of the WNBA ownership groups/individuals are holding these businesses as a piece of their portfolios, which makes me less sympathetic to their position of needing to balance the budget.
"...unceasingly we are bombarded with pseudo-realities manufactured by very sophisticated people using very sophisticated electronic mechanisms. I do not distrust their motives; I distrust their power. They have a lot of it."

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #17 on: July 21, 2025, 09:53:03 AM »

Offline Donoghus

  • Global Moderator
  • Walter Brown
  • ********************************
  • Posts: 32639
  • Tommy Points: 1731
  • What a Pub Should Be
9.3% is utterly insane.


2010 CB Historical Draft - Best Overall Team

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #18 on: July 21, 2025, 10:48:18 AM »

Offline Moranis

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 34556
  • Tommy Points: 1597
If you are going to wear those shirts, you can't approach the actual all star game like the NBA players.  You can't have players give live in game interviews calling the product on the floor garbage.  I mean this is a direct quote

"Just plain terrible. A disturbing display of basketball on both ends of the court."

That is from Page Bueckers. 

Sabrina Ionescu - "I think it probably would be more competitive if teams didn't play in such a short amount of days. And I think that's somethingbas we're talking obviously into our CBA and understanding that All-Stara don't really have a break. We finish, we get on a flight the next day, we're here, jam-packed weekend, wanting to pour into fans, show up to events, do 3 contests, skills contests, and then play in a game and fly right back to practice and play in three days.'

There you have it 2 stars of the game acknowledging they didn't try at all while begging for more money.  All the while they are live streaming drunk on Twitch.  And apparently Team Clark didn't even know about the shirts until just before warmup because no Team Clark members were in the planning meetings.  Seems to me they need an adult in the room because there clearly isnt one that understands optics.
2025 Historical Draft - Cleveland Cavaliers - 1st pick

Bigs -
Wings -  Lebron James
Guards -

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #19 on: Yesterday at 09:18:30 PM »

Offline hwangjini_1

  • Dennis Johnson
  • ******************
  • Posts: 18188
  • Tommy Points: 2747
  • bammokja
9.3% on a loss of 40 million seems about right.  The league has lost like a half a billion dollars and has never been profitable in any season.  Maybe start making some money before you claim you aren't paid properly.
see two posts above yours.  :)
I saw your post, I disagree.  Until the league makes money, the players don't deserve more.  The extra games (and already increased salaries, charter flights, etc.) has significantly increased the loss as most years the WNBA lost only about 10 million a year (it was about 40 million last year and projected in that same range for this year).  It is yet to be seen if the league is going to make that money back, especially because employee salaries are a very large part of whether a company makes money.  Even if the revenue increases a lot on the tv deal, even a small percentage increase in employee salary can mean that league doesn't make any money.

The NBA, NFL, MLB all make a lot of money.  They have done so for years.  That is why they can pay the percentage they can pay because they can do that and still make money.  The WNBA hasn't made money a single season.  And the interest right now really is just Clark.  She is the only one that would deserve more money.  The numbers bear that out.  The Fever and Clark are what are driving ticket sales and viewership, and it is basically almost entirely in Fever games that Clark plays.

hmmmm. you have missed that part of my post that mentioned the new TV deal with pushes the WNBA into the black, profitable mode. that might change your calculations and put you into the "pay them what they are worth" group.  :)
I believe Gandhi is the only person who knew about real democracy — not democracy as the right to go and buy what you want, but democracy as the responsibility to be accountable to everyone around you. Democracy begins with freedom from hunger, freedom from unemployment, freedom from fear, and freedom from hatred.
- Vandana Shiva

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #20 on: Yesterday at 09:52:41 PM »

Offline Moranis

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 34556
  • Tommy Points: 1597
9.3% on a loss of 40 million seems about right.  The league has lost like a half a billion dollars and has never been profitable in any season.  Maybe start making some money before you claim you aren't paid properly.
see two posts above yours.  :)
I saw your post, I disagree.  Until the league makes money, the players don't deserve more.  The extra games (and already increased salaries, charter flights, etc.) has significantly increased the loss as most years the WNBA lost only about 10 million a year (it was about 40 million last year and projected in that same range for this year).  It is yet to be seen if the league is going to make that money back, especially because employee salaries are a very large part of whether a company makes money.  Even if the revenue increases a lot on the tv deal, even a small percentage increase in employee salary can mean that league doesn't make any money.

The NBA, NFL, MLB all make a lot of money.  They have done so for years.  That is why they can pay the percentage they can pay because they can do that and still make money.  The WNBA hasn't made money a single season.  And the interest right now really is just Clark.  She is the only one that would deserve more money.  The numbers bear that out.  The Fever and Clark are what are driving ticket sales and viewership, and it is basically almost entirely in Fever games that Clark plays.

hmmmm. you have missed that part of my post that mentioned the new TV deal with pushes the WNBA into the black, profitable mode. that might change your calculations and put you into the "pay them what they are worth" group.  :)
I get they are going from 60 million to 200 million, but they are also expanding so there are more teams with their hand in the pie. They have 13 this year with Golden State, but they are going up to 18 teams. More teams also means more travel, more refs, more everything, which also increases the expenses and may not increase revenue enough to make up for that more travel and all those new salaries from all those new teams.  And if the petty WNBA players keep injuring Clark, they may find out real fast that the alleged increase in viewership, merchandise, etc. all goes away.  Maybe it is more than Clark, but until the numbers really show that, it sure looks like Clark is the reason and Clark needs to stay healthy and on the floor.
2025 Historical Draft - Cleveland Cavaliers - 1st pick

Bigs -
Wings -  Lebron James
Guards -

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #21 on: Yesterday at 10:53:45 PM »

Offline Donoghus

  • Global Moderator
  • Walter Brown
  • ********************************
  • Posts: 32639
  • Tommy Points: 1731
  • What a Pub Should Be
9.3% on a loss of 40 million seems about right.  The league has lost like a half a billion dollars and has never been profitable in any season.  Maybe start making some money before you claim you aren't paid properly.
see two posts above yours.  :)
I saw your post, I disagree.  Until the league makes money, the players don't deserve more.  The extra games (and already increased salaries, charter flights, etc.) has significantly increased the loss as most years the WNBA lost only about 10 million a year (it was about 40 million last year and projected in that same range for this year).  It is yet to be seen if the league is going to make that money back, especially because employee salaries are a very large part of whether a company makes money.  Even if the revenue increases a lot on the tv deal, even a small percentage increase in employee salary can mean that league doesn't make any money.

The NBA, NFL, MLB all make a lot of money.  They have done so for years.  That is why they can pay the percentage they can pay because they can do that and still make money.  The WNBA hasn't made money a single season.  And the interest right now really is just Clark.  She is the only one that would deserve more money.  The numbers bear that out.  The Fever and Clark are what are driving ticket sales and viewership, and it is basically almost entirely in Fever games that Clark plays.

hmmmm. you have missed that part of my post that mentioned the new TV deal with pushes the WNBA into the black, profitable mode. that might change your calculations and put you into the "pay them what they are worth" group.  :)
I get they are going from 60 million to 200 million, but they are also expanding so there are more teams with their hand in the pie. They have 13 this year with Golden State, but they are going up to 18 teams. More teams also means more travel, more refs, more everything, which also increases the expenses and may not increase revenue enough to make up for that more travel and all those new salaries from all those new teams.  And if the petty WNBA players keep injuring Clark, they may find out real fast that the alleged increase in viewership, merchandise, etc. all goes away.  Maybe it is more than Clark, but until the numbers really show that, it sure looks like Clark is the reason and Clark needs to stay healthy and on the floor.

An injured Clark will certainly affect ratings (see last weekend?s ASG) which might be a long term hypothetical concern but the league is also raking in money from expansion fees right now to the tune of $250 million a franchise.  Team valuations are exploding.  The league?s near term future is secure. 9.3% is ridiculous. The players deserve a lot more.


2010 CB Historical Draft - Best Overall Team

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #22 on: Yesterday at 11:55:46 PM »

Offline Ilikesports17

  • Don Nelson
  • ********
  • Posts: 8724
  • Tommy Points: 855
In truth, Ive historically kind of rolled my eyes at the grousing of WNBA players about salary. But I do think the players should get a lot more here.

Im guessing the owners will give them a much bigger chunk of the pie in exchange for no more moonlighting overseas.

Re: Pay us what you owe us.
« Reply #23 on: Today at 06:03:55 AM »

Offline Moranis

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 34556
  • Tommy Points: 1597
9.3% on a loss of 40 million seems about right.  The league has lost like a half a billion dollars and has never been profitable in any season.  Maybe start making some money before you claim you aren't paid properly.
see two posts above yours.  :)
I saw your post, I disagree.  Until the league makes money, the players don't deserve more.  The extra games (and already increased salaries, charter flights, etc.) has significantly increased the loss as most years the WNBA lost only about 10 million a year (it was about 40 million last year and projected in that same range for this year).  It is yet to be seen if the league is going to make that money back, especially because employee salaries are a very large part of whether a company makes money.  Even if the revenue increases a lot on the tv deal, even a small percentage increase in employee salary can mean that league doesn't make any money.

The NBA, NFL, MLB all make a lot of money.  They have done so for years.  That is why they can pay the percentage they can pay because they can do that and still make money.  The WNBA hasn't made money a single season.  And the interest right now really is just Clark.  She is the only one that would deserve more money.  The numbers bear that out.  The Fever and Clark are what are driving ticket sales and viewership, and it is basically almost entirely in Fever games that Clark plays.

hmmmm. you have missed that part of my post that mentioned the new TV deal with pushes the WNBA into the black, profitable mode. that might change your calculations and put you into the "pay them what they are worth" group.  :)
I get they are going from 60 million to 200 million, but they are also expanding so there are more teams with their hand in the pie. They have 13 this year with Golden State, but they are going up to 18 teams. More teams also means more travel, more refs, more everything, which also increases the expenses and may not increase revenue enough to make up for that more travel and all those new salaries from all those new teams.  And if the petty WNBA players keep injuring Clark, they may find out real fast that the alleged increase in viewership, merchandise, etc. all goes away.  Maybe it is more than Clark, but until the numbers really show that, it sure looks like Clark is the reason and Clark needs to stay healthy and on the floor.

An injured Clark will certainly affect ratings (see last weekend?s ASG) which might be a long term hypothetical concern but the league is also raking in money from expansion fees right now to the tune of $250 million a franchise.  Team valuations are exploding.  The league?s near term future is secure. 9.3% is ridiculous. The players deserve a lot more.
expansion fees never count as revenue because they are one off payments.  Let's see if the league actual starts making money before we claim they deserve more.
2025 Historical Draft - Cleveland Cavaliers - 1st pick

Bigs -
Wings -  Lebron James
Guards -