- Joined
- Jan 13, 2014
- Messages
- 9,875
- Reaction Score
- 29,429
It looks like the men’s game is soon headed back to where the super elite players will go straight out of high school and skip college altogether. Not sure many women players are pro-ready right out of high school, or even after their freshman year. ??Good for her just as she was starting to come into her own. I worry more about what the new agreement will not only do to UConn but the entire landscape of women’s college basketball. I would hate to see it turn out to be a one and done like the men’s game,
Anyway, I don’t think the new WNBA deal is enough of an increase for rookies that it will move the needle much on early outs. If/when it gets to where the women are making significantly bigger money, then the best/pro-ready college underclass players will absolutely challenge the system if it’s unfairly keeping them from earning that money.
But with only about 20 new players being absorbed into the WNBA every year, how many underclass women is this really going to impact? 5-6? It would probably affect UConn and a few other elite teams disproportionately, since that’s where the “stars” are concentrated. Sort of act as a force to level the ‘parity’ playing field.