WNBA Players Wear Delusional „Pay Us” Shirts In Protest Over Contract Dispute

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WNBA Players Wear Delusional „Pay Us” Shirts In Protest Over Contract Dispute

For several years the WNBA and other female sports figures have tried to ride the third-wave of feminist propaganda in and attempt to garner pity from the public and demand a higher pay rate. In 2020, this was largely centered on the fallacy of the „gender pay gap”, a now thoroughly debunked claim that women get paid less than men due to sexism and discrimination.

In fact, the studies feminists use to support the gender pay gap theory do not actually show any evidence that such a discrepancy exists. Not accounting for all factors, yes, women make less than men on average, but this is because men work longer hours, take less vacation days, do not take leave for pregnancy or family and are more likely to ask for a raise. In other words, men get paid more because they work harder, not because there is a patriarchal conspiracy to make women work for less.

The general public has been educated on the lies of the gender pay gap narrative, but this has not stopped some activists from promoting it anyway. The WNBA has been incessant in its efforts to push the notion that they are paid less, purely because they are women. This time they are touting increased audience numbers as evidence.

In the recent WNBA All-Stars Game opening, players including Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers and Angel Reese, wore „Pay Us What You Owe Us” T-shirts during warm-ups. The shirts were worn to highlight the WNBA contract dispute in CBA negotiations.

The players and the league failed to reach a new collective bargaining agreement at an in-person meeting last week. The league’s players opted out of their last CBA in October and they are looking for a better revenue-sharing model, increased salaries, improved benefits and a softer salary cap after record attendance and TV ratings in 2024.

The problem is, „record” attendance and TV ratings don’t mean much for a league which has never turned a profit in its 29 year history. Let’s break down why WNBA players don’t deserve a pay increase…

The WNBA is subsidized by the NBA. Without the men’s league the WNBA would not exist and would have no operating cash.

To put this in perspective, the NBA brought in $11.3 billion in revenues in 2024 (ticket sales, advertising, product deals, etc.). The WNBA brought in $710 million in revenues in 2024. The NBA does not calculate league-wide profits, with each team franchise reporting their own individual profits (referred to as Operating Income).

The team with the highest operating income in 2024 was the Los Angeles Lakers with nearly $200 million. WNBA teams do not report their individual operating incomes, but the league as a whole lost $40 million in 2024 even with higher viewership.

One WNBA claim is true: They have increased their audience in the past year. The league’s viewership jumped from an average of 500,000 people in 2023 to 1.1 million in 2024. That’s quite a success story, but not as important to player payment contracts as one might think.

First and foremost, the majority of gains in WNBA viewership are owed to one player – Caitlin Clark. Clark has displayed actual skill on the court, something which has been severely lacking in WNBA games for many years. Furthermore, the ongoing controversy over other players attacking Clark on and off the court (female jealousy and girl-fights) has lured in watchers. There have been multiple flagrant attempts, for instance, to poke out Clark’s eyes during game play.

NEW: WNBA star Caitlin Clark gets blindsided to the ground after getting fouled.

Clark was apparently hit in the eye before getting knocked to the ground by Connecticut Sun player Marina Mabrey.

A lot of jealousy going on in the WNBA. pic.twitter.com/tUfyc9dXuA

— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 18, 2025

Fans of Clark see her and her team as underdogs battling an army of low class ghetto players trying to cripple her just for getting more media attention (or for being white). The drama has led to a larger audience and Clark is a ratings magnet. As proof, when Clark was sidelined from games in May due to an injury, WNBA ratings plunged by a staggering 55%. In other words, Clark is the only reason people are watching.

The same players that have been jealously criticizing Caitlin Clark and her team and injuring her on the court (and smiling while doing it) have apparently been pressuring her to be more vocal about the contract dispute.

During a post game presser, two-time WNBA champion Kelsey Plum singled out Team Clark players for not being as participatory as members of Team Collier in the planning of the on-court tee demonstration.

„It was a very powerful moment…We didn’t … know that that was gonna happen, so I think it was kind of a genuine surprise. The T-shirt — just [the] united front — was determined this morning. That, we had a meeting for.

„You know, not to tattletale, but zero members of Team Clark were very present for that.”

WNBA ticket sales in 2024 averaged 9800 fans per game, a 22-year high. However, the NBA brings in an average of 18,700 fans per game. WNBA tickets sell for $20-$50 per seat with high end tickets going for $150. NBA tickets sell for $97 per seat on average and $500 or more for high end tickets.

For an organization of players that lose money every year, feed off the men’s organizations, and owe almost all of their recent success to a single player who they seem to hate, these women are acting incredibly entitled. Until the WNBA actually brings in legitimate profits they have no right to demand anything. And, if there is an eventual pay raise, the majority of the money should go to Caitlin Clark.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 07/21/2025 – 09:05

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