The Denver Post

Players say life in Russia lucrative, lonely

- By Doug Feinberg

For the elite athletes in the WNBA, spending the offseason playing in Russia can mean earning more money than they can make back home — sometimes even two or three times as much.

But those who have done that also describe the loneliness of being away from family and friends, of struggling with an unfamiliar language and culture, and of living in a place with only a few hours of sunlight in the winter and temperatur­es well below freezing.

Brittney Griner is one of those players who went to Russia in recent years to earn extra money. For the two- time Olympian, however, it has turned into a prolonged nightmare.

Since arriving at a Moscow airport in mid- February, she has been detained by police after they reported finding vape cartridges allegedly containing cannabis oil in her luggage. She is awaiting trial next month on charges that could bring up to 10 years in prison.

A half- dozen American players contacted by The Associated Press shared their experience­s on playing in Russia. Although none found themselves in the same situation as Griner, they described difficulti­es such as isolation and boredom, apart from basketball.

“Playing there was not easy because the lifestyle and the way of living is a lot different than what you experience in other places in Europe and America,” said Delisha Milton- Jones, one of the first marquee American players to play in Russia in the early 2000s.

“The extremes of the weather — it’s pitch black dark at 5 p. m. I had to wear my big jacket warming up sometimes since it was minus40 degrees outside,” said Milton- Jones, who played for UMKC Ekaterinbu­rg, the same team as Griner.

In the early 2000s, top WNBA players could earn about $ 125,000 a year as part of a marketing deal with the league. Today, the salary for elite players is about $ 500,000.

By playing in Russia, those players can earn another $ 1 million to $ 1.5 million.

Players say the Russian teams try to make them as comfortabl­e as possible, including sometimes providing drivers and translator­s.

Apartments provided by the teams are comparable with what the players are accustomed to in the WNBA, including Western kitchens and laundry facilities.

Milton- Jones, 47, played in other European leagues but said Russia paid the most at the time. And none topped UMKC Ekaterinbu­rg, which continues to be an attractive destinatio­n for players.

Milton- Jones helped the club win its first Euroleague title. The team’s owner, Shabtai Kalmanovic­h, changed the standard of pay and living for WNBA players in Russia before he was shot and killed in Moscow in 2009.

“We chartered. Did everything five- star,” MiltonJone­s said at USA Basketball training camp earlier this month. “He would just spoil us. He’d send us to France for a weekend and give us thousands of dollars to go shopping on a private plane. No matter the club, you didn’t know where the money was coming from and you didn’t care. You were there to do a job.”

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