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The pregame portion of Saturday's match brought the league's contractual dispute with its players into full focus.
Each player, as well as Caitlin Clark looking on from the bench, wore a black shirt reading "Pay Us What You Owe Us." It was a clear message to the WNBA after a week of seemingly fruitless talks in ...
The WNBA's best players made a powerful statement before Saturday night's All-Star game when they put together a show of solidarity by wearing pregame warm-up shirts with one simple demand to the ...
WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert remains optimistic that a new labor deal will be struck, and in a press conference ahead of ...
INDIANAPOLIS – As WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert held a press conference in the depths of Gainbridge Fieldhouse ahead of ...
Just a day after characterizing stalled talks with commissioner Cathy Engelbert and team ownership representatives as a "missed opportunity", the WNBA players seized the opportunity to send a firm ...
Caitlin Clark and her fellow WNBA players wore T-shirts telling league bosses to 'pay us what you owe us' as talks over a new ...
Cathy Engelbert’s comments came shortly before WNBA All-Star players took the court at Gainbridge Fieldhouse with T-shirts ...
The tees made an appearance Saturday as the Women's National Basketball Players Association and WNBA negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement.
WNBA All-Star players sent a message to league officials by wearing t-shirts with a blunt slogan demanding better pay.
Ahead of the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game, players made their feelings about negotiations with owners on the league's next collective bargaining agreement crystal clear.
The WNBA has reached peak popularity. Players are hoping to turn all the attention on the league into a lucrative new CBA, and they mean business. Before Saturday's WNBA All-Star Game, players on both ...