bawitdaball said:
HoustonBear15 said:
I don't think it's unfair for the players to want their hard work reflected through their salary. More people need to show up to games and support the league. There's been a lot of "protect women's sports" chatter lately, but no real follow through.
While I agree with you - I think we all want to be respected and paid a fair wage. But we also understand that when the company is losing money to the level of the WNBA, you don't really have the leverage to say that you are worth more. They are putting you in a position to show your value and there isn't a positive monetary response, Angel Reese can complain all day long that playing bal doesn't pay her bills, but without her skillset she is looking at a ton of school debt and an entry level position in corporate America, which is currently seeing quite a few layoffs, depending on the industry. The mindset is just way off and they don't deserve special treatment just because they are household names. If the league isn't making money with a huge increase in eyeballs, then it likely is closer to being shut down than many realize - at least if it operates as a traditional business would be required to do. Okay, rant over.
Where are you getting your numbers from? Just curious. The article from the NY Post?
I chuckle at the rants about the NBA propping up the WNBA in order to be "woke." The NBA and its owners are savvy businessmen and you can bet they see a benefit for themselves or they wouldn't be involved.
I think there was originally some pressure on NBA owners to invest in a WNBA team, but obviously not much, as there were only eight initial teams, and quite a few of those don't exist any longer, or like the Liberty, are no longer under ownership of an NBA team owner.
In the original model, the thought was the games would be in the off seasons, scheduled in between summer concerts and traveling entertainment like circuses, etc. This kept a stream of incoming money to pay venue staff and kept the venues from being idle for lengths of time.
As far as operating at a loss, many of those owners were making a ton of money through other streams. Maybe not in yours and my world, but there are times when losses can be actual gains to bottom lines.
In fact, there was a push back in the women's league a decade or so ago, that some of the NBA owners were actually inhibiting the growth of the women's game because they really were not interested in making a profit and were not willing to make necessary investments to grow the game.
Teams are trending toward moving out from under NBA ownership, and some franchises are looking at nonNBA locations. The growth of tv coverage for the women's game is helpful. Hard to identify with players you've never seen. Clark was huge not just because she was a phenomenal player, but because people got to see and experience her play. Cheryl Miller was a phenomenal player, as well, and certainly the public heard stories about that, but with limited exposure, how many saw and experienced her game?
I would also point out that most WNBA teams are also being supported by corporate sponsorship, and those companies are CHOOSING to do so. Again, as you point out in your arguments above, businesses should (and do) work to make a profit. Why is sponsorship growing if that is a losing proposition? I think there is a disconnect there between the numbers we keep hearing and the growth and expansion and increased sponsorship, and I ask myself, whom do I believe more? Why would savvy business people invest in corporate sponsorship, why would tv carry more games, why would number of franchises and games increase, if business didn't at least see a potential for profit, and the reasons I can come up with make a lot less sense than the ones I can come up with for, "Why might the numbers around profitability of WNBA be misrepresented or 'fudged' to look less desirable than perhaps it is? Hmmmm. Who benefits from saying a product is less desirable or profitable than it is in reality? The answers I come up with there seem a lot more likely than all business people associated with this league now (after 28 seasons) are just plain clueless.
As has been discussed on the football board so often, live content is a hot commodity as streaming explodes. There is an audience for WNBA games, as evidenced by the numbers for both live and tv viewership. They may not be stunning numbers currently, but the game is growing thanks to the increased visibility of female athletes at the college level and the development of the game due to better coaching at all levels and role models for younger players who find a home in the sport.
I watched a documentary ages ago, about the evolution of men's professional basketball in the US, and was struck by the growth similarities, with the exception of how quickly the NBA evolved. The women have taken longer and I don't think the money will ever be in the WNBA like in the NBA, but perhaps that is not a bad thing. I think if the women could get to a place where they don't have to go overseas or have second jobs and can concentrate solely on basketball while making a decent living salary, that would be sufficient. That won't happen without the conversation at least taking place. I say "Good luck, ladies!"