WNBA, Caitlin Clark
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Dave Portnoy, the founder of Barstool Sports, has made his opinion on WNBA players demanding more money clear. WNBA players wore "Pay Us What You Owe Us" shirts at the All-Star Game in Indianapolis. The league is currently negotiating a new collective bargaining agreement with its players. The ...
A demand for better pay dominated the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game as players took the court in shirts saying “Pay Us What You Owe Us.”
The Liberty had a legitimate chance to secure a second-straight WNBA championship, given their roster retention from the previous year, and 2) If any team could spoil New York’s plans of repeating, the most likely would be the Lynx,
The now-viral shirt, which has a Women's National Basketball Player's Association logo underneath the text for the players' union, is officially available through a link on the WNBAPA's Instagram.
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Over the past three days, Indianapolis was taken over by the league and its legions of new fans. The players, now global superstars, were mobbed everywhere they went. Downtown, the JW Marriott was covered in a giant Caitlin Clark banner that covered 30 of the hotel's 34 stories and took nine days to install, per Scott Agness .
If a new contract deal isn't reached by October, some players, including all-star Angel Reese, have mentioned the potential for a walkout.
WNBA players on both Team Clark and Team Collier, including huge stars like Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers and Angel Reese, wore "Pay Us What You Owe Us" T-shirts during warm-ups ahead of Saturday night's All-Star Game.
Jemele Hill joins the Dan Le Batard Show to discuss the WNBA's nine percent player revenue share, calls the league a "safe tax bunker" for the NBA's billionaire owners, and exposes the lack of real investment in players.