WNBA Power Struggle: Players Say ‘Not Yet’ To Extension, League Pleads For Time

11 hours ago 5
ARTICLE AD BOX

Last Updated:October 29, 2025, 18:31 IST

The WNBA and WNBPA face tense CBA talks as the deadline nears. Stars like Napheesa Collier criticize leadership, and expansion teams Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire risk delays.

The current CBA expires on Friday and an extension will allow both sides more time to negotiate a new deal. (X)

The current CBA expires on Friday and an extension will allow both sides more time to negotiate a new deal. (X)

The WNBA is running out of time to avoid a labor standoff, and it seems like Halloween might bring more tricks than treats to the league.

According to ESPN, the league has proposed a 30-day extension to continue collective bargaining negotiations with the WNBPA, as the current collective bargaining agreement (CBA) expires this Friday.

Extensions aren’t new. The two sides agreed to a 60-day delay in 2019 before striking a new deal in January 2020, but this time, the atmosphere is far more tense.

While the players’ union has not ruled out an extension “under the right circumstances," sources told ESPN those conditions “do not yet exist."

Erin D. Drake, senior adviser and legal counsel to the WNBPA, recently said on the No Offseason podcast that she doesn’t expect an agreement by Halloween.

“We’re not going to have a deal by the deadline," Drake said, criticizing the league for “not matching the PA’s efforts."

The league, however, insists it’s doing its part — saying it made a formal proposal on October 1, and that the union only responded on Monday.

At the heart of the stalemate is a familiar sticking point: money. Players want a revenue-sharing model that actually reflects the league’s growth — from attendance surges to record-breaking TV viewership — while the WNBA maintains the union hasn’t engaged “in any meaningful way" with its proposals.

The PA fired back, saying the league’s offer “retreads a system that isn’t tied to the business and intentionally undervalues players."

Tensions have also boiled over publicly. Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier recently called WNBA leadership “the worst in the world," a sentiment echoed by union president Nneka Ogwumike and executive committee member Elizabeth Williams.

A potential lockout would hit the league’s two expansion teams — the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire — especially hard, putting their expansion draft plans on ice until a new CBA is signed.

Siddarth Sriram

Siddarth Sriram

After training in the field of broadcast media, Siddarth, as a sub-editor for News18 Sports, currently dabbles in putting together stories, from across a plethora of sports, onto a digital canvas. His long-term...Read More

After training in the field of broadcast media, Siddarth, as a sub-editor for News18 Sports, currently dabbles in putting together stories, from across a plethora of sports, onto a digital canvas. His long-term...

Read More

First Published:

October 29, 2025, 18:31 IST

News sports WNBA Power Struggle: Players Say ‘Not Yet’ To Extension, League Pleads For Time

Disclaimer: Comments reflect users’ views, not News18’s. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Read More

Read Entire Article