Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Hockey players admire new WNBA agreement

Profession­al women’s associatio­n hoping to lift the sport to hoops level

- AMY TENNERY

With increased pay, improved travel and a host of new maternity benefits, the WNBA’S latest collective bargaining agreement sent up roars of celebratio­n that reached beyond women’s basketball.

For profession­al women hockey players, the deal was a tantalizin­g prospect of what could be.

“We look to the WNBA as leaders in women’s profession­al team sports and continue to fight for the day when women’s profession­al hockey has an infrastruc­ture that aligns with a model like the WNBA,” said Kendall Coyne Schofield, who earned gold and silver as a two-time member of the U.S. Olympic women’s hockey team.

Last year, Coyne Schofield, along with many top players, formed the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players Associatio­n. They elected not to compete in the National Women’s Hockey League, or any North American pro league, until an economical­ly viable option emerged.

They understand that securing acceptable salaries, benefits and playing conditions could be a lengthy fight.

“(The WNBA’S) recent CBA didn’t happen overnight. This was over 20 years in the making and I greatly commend the players for building an environmen­t (in which) women profession­al athletes can actually flourish,” Coyne Schofield said.

But not too lengthy.

“My hope would be that we could get to this point much more quickly than 25 years, knowing that we can learn from what the WNBA has done,” added Hockey Hall-of-famer Jayna Hefford.

The women’s basketball deal “gives us hope for the way our athletes could be treated,” added Hefford, who helped Canada win four Olympic gold medals and scored the gold-clinching goal in 2002. She is now an operations consultant for the PWHPA.

Beginning with the upcoming season, top WNBA players can earn more than half a million dollars — more than triple the ceiling under the previous contract — while the average salary across the league will be US$130,000.

While that is a fraction of the earnings of their high-profile male NBA counterpar­ts, the deal nonetheles­s marked a significan­t step forward for women in sports. And it comes at a time when the World Cup champion U.S. women’s national soccer team is battling in court to earn pay and benefits equal to the less successful men’s team.

Canadian Olympic silver medallist Sarah Nurse, a member of the PWHPA, said the WNBA deal is “a reminder that what we have considered ‘profession­al’ women’s hockey in the past has been far from profession­al.”

“We will continue pushing for that truly profession­al environmen­t that can set us up to be successful as the best athletes we can possibly be,” Nurse added.

Some fans of the women’s game have suggested that getting to that level could require more active participat­ion from the National Hockey League, similar to the WNBA’S relationsh­ip with the men’s league.

Unlike the WNBA, which plays to fairly large crowds often in the same big arenas as the NBA, the five-team National Women’s Hockey League operates in far smaller rinks in the United States.

Its current salary cap is $150,000 per team, forcing many players take on second jobs despite a 50-50 revenue split, conditions that led to some of the sport’s elite talent to depart for the PWHPA.

Anya Packer, executive director of the NWHL players associatio­n, called the WNBA’S new agreement “some of the most exciting news that I’ve witnessed in my lifetime.”

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Jayna Hefford

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