NEW YORK — WNBA players’ union president Nneka Ogwumike said significant work remains for the season to start on time but said she remains confident games will be played in 2026.
“I know our players 100% want to play this year,’’ she said in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press on Friday. ‘’We want a season.’’
Ogwumike said the league and union are not close on key issues like revenue sharing in their effort to strike a new collective bargaining agreement. The clock is ticking. The season is supposed to begin May 8, but an expansion draft, free agency and a rookie draft also need to happen before the league tips off.
Ogwumike said once revenue sharing is solved, the rest hopefully will fall into place quickly.
‘’We made the point that once we nail this, we can get everything else done,’’ Ogwumike said.
The league submitted a new proposal to the union Friday evening according to a person familiar with the negotiations. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the discussions. This ended a more than six-week wait from the players association for a counter to their last offer.
After a three-hour meeting Monday at the NBA offices, the union left with the understanding it would have a new proposal soon. It came Friday.
The major sticking point has been revenue sharing. The players want around 30% of the gross revenue — money generated before expenses — for the first year in their latest proposal. Under the league’s last proposal, players would receive in excess of 70% of net revenue, though that would be their take of the profits after expenses are paid. Those expenses would include upgraded facilities, charter flights, five-star hotels, medical services, security and arenas.