The champagne bottles from a historic draft night sat empty, but the real celebration for the WNBA’s future was on hold.
In a candid moment this week, Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham validated the league’s most inconvenient financial truth.
During discussions around the stalled Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), Cunningham framed the standoff with blunt business clarity.
Sophie Cunningham fuels speculation with a viral in-flight TikTok moment
Her remarks directly align with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver’s 2018 statement that the NBA loses over $10 million annually operating the WNBA. A 2024New York Post report indicated those losses have been significantly higher, estimating a $40 million deficit last season.
“I totally understand the business side of things… The W has not always made money, and there’s still a big chunk of money that has been lost…
Sophie Cunningham
Profit vs. pay: The financial standoff explained
This isn’t about denying the league’s explosive growth in viewership and attendance. It’s about the lag between popularity and profitability. The current financial structure, stemming from a $75 million capital raise in 2022, leaves a narrow slice of revenue for teams and players.
Analysts note players receive less than 10% of total league revenue, a stark contrast to the near 50-50 revenue share in the NBA. Cunningham’s pragmatic take underscores why owners and players are gridlocked: one side cites sustained losses, the other demands a fairer share of the growth they are driving.
“The laughingstock of sports”: A player’s raw assessment
Understanding the balance sheet didn’t soften Cunningham’s frustration with the negotiation process itself. This sentiment followed a recent in-person meeting where, according to an ESPN report, the league arrived without a new formal proposal.
The lack of movement has tangible consequences, freezing free agency and leaving players unable to sign contracts.
“It sucks, because how our negotiation is going, it feels like we’re the laughingstock of sports right now…
Sophie Cunningham
Can the WNBA turn momentum into a new model?
The path forward requires bridging a gap defined by decades of dependency and a new era of potential. The immediate impact is a league in operational limbo.
Resolution hinges on the WNBPA and league finding a creative middle ground-a revenue-sharing formula that rewards investment while funding the player compensation necessary to sustain this hot streak.
The world is watching to see if the WNBA’s brightest chapter will be written collaboratively or curtailed by an old economic script.
This report synthesizes verified player statements from press conferences, financial figures from established news reports (New York Post, ESPN), and structural analysis from sports business publications. All figures cited are from these published reports.









