The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Why WNBA players go overseas to play

- By Doug Feinberg

Russia has been a popular destinatio­n for WNBA players like Brittney Griner over the past two decades because of the money they can make playing there in the winter.

With top players earn- ing more than $1 million — nearly quadruple what they can make as a base salary in the WNBA — Griner, Breanna Stewart, Diana Taurasi, Sue Bird and Jonquel Jones have been willing to spend their offseason playing far from home. It’s tough for WNBA players to turn down that kind of money despite safety concerns and politics in some of the countries where they play.

The 31-year-old Griner, a seven-time All-star for the Phoenix Mercury, has played in Russia since 2014. She was returning from a break for the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup qualifying tournament­s when she was arrested at an airport near Moscow last month after Russian authoritie­s said a search of her luggage revealed vape cartridges.

On Saturday, the State Department issued a “do not travel” advisory for Rus

sia because of its invasion of Ukraine and urged all U.S. citizens to depart immediatel­y, citing factors includ- ing “the potential for harassment against U.S. citizens by Russian government security officials” and “the Embas- sy’s limited ability to assist” Americans in Russia.

Turkey, Australia, China and France also have strong women’s basketball domestic leagues where some of the WNBA’S best play in their offseason.

Why Russian salaries are so high

Russian sports leagues have been able to pay top players these high salaries because some of the teams are funded by government municipali­ties while oth- ers are owned by oligarchs who care more about win- ning championsh­ips and trophies than being prof- itable. There are stories of Russian owners putting up players in luxury accommodat­ions, taking them on shopping sprees and buying them expensive gifts in addi- tion to paying their salaries.

In 2015, Taurasi’s team, UMMC Ekaterinbu­rg — the same one Griner plays for — paid her to skip the WNBA season and rest.

“We had to go to a communist country to get paid like capitalist­s, which is so backward to everything that was in the history books in sixth grade,” Taurasi said a few years ago.

The Russian league has a completely different financial structure from the WNBA, where there is a salary cap, players’ union and collective bargaining agreement.

The WNBA has made strides to increase player salaries and find other ways to compensate players in the last CBA, which was ratified in 2020. The contract, which runs through 2027, pays players an average of $130,000, with the top stars able to earn more than $500,000 through salary, marketing agreements, an in-season tournament and bonuses.

The CBA also provides full salaries while players are on maternity leave, enhanced family benefits, travel standards and other health and wellness improvemen­ts.

Who plays there?

More than a dozen WNBA players were playing in Russia and Ukraine this winter, including league MVP Jones and Courtney Vandersloo­t and Allie Quigley of the champion Chicago Sky. The WNBA confirmed Saturday that all players besides Griner had left both countries.

Almost half of the WNBA’S 144 players were overseas this offseason, although stars Candace Parker, Bird, Chiney Ogwumike and Chelsea Gray opted to stay stateside.

Will this last?

From purely a basketball standpoint, the CBA will make it more difficult for WNBA players to compete overseas in the future. Beginning in 2023, there will be new WNBA prioritiza­tion rules. Any player who arrives late to training camp will be fined at a rate of 1% of base salary per day late. In addition, any player who does not arrive before the first day of the regular season will be ineligible to play at all that season. In 2024 and thereafter, any player who does not arrive before the first day of training camp (or, with respect to unsigned players, finish playing overseas) will be ineligible to play for the entire season.

The WNBA typically begins training camp in late April and the regular season starts in early May. Some foreign leagues don’t end before those dates.

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