Forward of the 2025 WNBA All-Star Recreation, gamers made their emotions about negotiations with house owners on the league’s subsequent collective bargaining settlement crystal clear.
Throughout warm-ups, gamers wore shirts with “Pay Us What You Owe Us” written throughout the chest. (h/t ESPN’s Holly Rowe)
Earlier this week, gamers, commissioner Cathy Engelbert and proprietor representatives met face-to-face for the first time since December, two months after gamers opted out of the present CBA, setting it to run out on the conclusion of the 2025 season.
Per ESPN’s Kendra Andrews, over 40 gamers attended the conferences, making it “the biggest in-person participant turnout in union historical past throughout CBA talks.”
Afterward, the union lamented a “missed opportunity” on the assembly. In an announcement, the WNBPA wrote, “The WNBA’s response to our proposals fails to handle the priorities we have voiced from the day we opted out.”
“The one factor extra unsustainable than the present system is pretending it might probably go on without end,” the assertion continued.
“We’re on a time crunch. Nobody desires a lockout,” mentioned All-Star staff captain and MVP favourite Minnesota Lynx ahead Napheesa Collier.
The show of solidarity throughout All-Star Recreation warm-ups illustrates gamers’ urgency in getting a deal performed.
It additionally exhibits a thornier facet of negotiations, with gamers calling out the league on one in all its greatest phases.
New York Liberty guard Natasha Cloud spoke concerning the battle between the 2 sides following Thursday’s in-person assembly, saying “We’re not going to be holding arms by the CBA. We’re preventing for what we’re due, what we’re price, our worth.”
“Our job is to seek out widespread floor, however that does not imply we hold taking the crumbs of the pie,” Cloud added.
Gamers know what they need, and so they aren’t afraid to say it. The lingering query is how the WNBA will obtain the message.