Cape Breton Post

Clark’s meagre WNBA salary fires up social media

- DAN BILICKI POSTMEDIA NEWS

Being one of the biggest stars in the history of your sport and the No. 1 overall pick in the draft usually will net that player a massive contract, commensura­te with their talent level.

That decidedly is not the case for Caitlin Clark.

After breaking the record for most career points in women’s college basketball this year and leading her Iowa Hawkeyes to the brink of a championsh­ip before falling to powerhouse South Carolina, Clark was drafted first overall by the WNBA’s Indiana Fever on Monday night.

Her first contract with the team, however, was incredibly underwhelm­ing.

According to Sportrac, Clark’s deal is worth a meagre US$338,056 over four years. The sharpshoot­er will make US$76,535 in her rookie year and will max out at US$97,582 in 2027.

However, Clark’s rookie status limits her potential paydays due to WNBA salary rules, which sees the top four picks earning the same amount in their first season.

Overall, the three highestpai­d players in the WNBA – Dallas Wings’ Arike Ogunbowale, Phoenix Mercury’s Kahleah Copper and Seattle Storm’s Jewell Loyd – all make roughly $242,000 per year, according to Spotrac.

Compared to NBA players, those numbers pale in comparison. The average salary in the NBA for the 2023-24 season is $9.7 million with the league minimum sitting at a pricey $1.1 million – roughly 15 times higher than what Clark will make.

Super Bowl-winning QB Russell Wilson knows a thing or two about cashing in on success and he was quick to highlight howClark and her fellow WNBA stars deserve more.

“These ladies deserve so much more… Praying for the day,” Wilson wrote in a post.

While Wilson signed a one-year, $1.2-million deal with the Pittsburgh Steelers this off-season, he will still be paid $39 million by the Denver Broncos, who released him earlier this year with guaranteed money left on his contract.

 ?? FILE ?? Caitlin Clark.
FILE Caitlin Clark.

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