LAS VEGAS — The WNBA is investigating whether the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority's $100,000 annual sponsorship to Aces player for this season and next is allowed.
A league spokesperson confirmed Saturday that there is an open investigation looking into the deal. The sponsorship does not violate the WNBA's salary cap because the Las Vegas authority did not orchestrate it with the club. But other teams likely were raising questions about the fairness of the sponsorship and whether it violates the spirit of the cap rules.
''I'll put it to you real simple. Most of sponsorship people go after the top two people,'' Aces coach Becky Hammon said. ''This situation from what I understand is, they wanted the whole team. They called individual agents. I don't know the details. I have nothing to do with it. The Aces don't have anything to do with it. That's what happened.''
This isn't the Aces first run-in with the league over the last few years. Last year, the WNBA suspended Hammon for two games and took away the Aces' 2025 first-round draft pick because the franchise violated league rules regarding impermissible player benefits and workplace policies.
''Just another day in the life of the Aces. We can't just ever start normal," star A'ja Wilson said. "There's always going to be something and that's OK. When we're talking about growing the game or taking the next step it can't always be investigated. It has to be like we're trying to make things better for franchises, for players for teams.''
The head of the authority feels they did nothing wrong.
''We did this the right way,'' authority president and CEO Steve Hill told The Associated Press on Saturday. ''We did something that we think works for Las Vegas and I think great for the players. We did this without the team. It was our idea and any questions they ask they'll find that out.''
The authority posted a video on X of Hill telling the players in the locker room the news on Friday.