MrDollarBills wrote:CC just publicly backed Phee. Cathy is DONE and I expect a strike or lock out to be imminent
Clark backing Phee is indeed a killer blow for the Commish and her cabal, and I'll be very surpised if there's not a new Commish within the next year. A change might occur right after the Finals as you say, but time will tell.
Regarding a coming work stoppage, yeah, that's where it seems like things are going right now. If it doesn't happen, it'll be because the WNBA off-season is quite long and so there are still many months before the "work start" normally happens.
I still think that giving W players largely what they want should be a super-simple thing this go 'round, but I think the WNBA's management has painted themselves into a corner.
How do you play hardball with the players while greenlighting a ton of expansion teams?
How do you not play hardball with the players if the expansion teams were felt they were assured financial terms based on the past?
This is the sort of situation that you really need to anticipate ahead of time, and the WNBA didn't. It's not a horrible sadistic sin on their part, but it's also a predictable crisis at a time of rapid growth in popularity, and since this is the first time of rapid growth in popularity in the history of the W, it also makes it the single most important moment to be prepared for... and they just weren't.
I find myself continuing to ruminate on Cathy's "on their knees" quote. I'd expect if it were completely false, she's say so, but instead she just said her words were mischaracterized. Thing is, while this can be true to some degree - I don't think Cathy has this job because she wants to screw over female basketball players - it just plays in to exactly the the issue of how it seems the Clark phenomenon is perceived in NBA circles. The WNBA wants this moment to be the time for them to be taking a victory lap for keeping the torch of pro women's basketball alive in the US through dark times, and that's not what this moment is, or honestly, was ever going to be.
I've previously talked a lot on the GB about the nature of a sport become a major mainstream spectator sport with the key thesis being: It's about breakout stars. Fans are human beings, and for any sport that wasn't already super-popular, they tend to become fans of specific human beings before they become fans of teams.
That means that as an organization, you can position yourself to be the interest that "has the tiger by the tail" when a Caitlin-like tiger emerges, you have to recognize that you are not the tiger, and this is where WNBA leadership has failed in the moment of their greatest opportunity, and while I still think it most likely that this all gets figured out in the long term and the WNBA continues to be the most powerful women's pro league on the planet, now even in the best case scenario we're going to see some heads roll.
As I say all of this, there is one other thing that the W should have recognized:
The popularity of pro basketball in the US, must like pro football, came on the back of college ball. American college sports fans tend to be early adopters in part because they're used to cheering for their college in any sport they happen to be watching, and so that team brand exists in college in a way it doesn't in the pros until much later.
This to say then that the WNBA should have been expecting that college would produce the crossover superstars rather than themselves, and that when the college crossover star came of age, they would need to do some wooing of that star and all their other players. Instead they seem to have taken the popularity of a college star as a product of their pro product, which just isn't something I think they'd have done if they weren't talking delusionally behind the scenes. I don't know if Cathy is the person most to blame for this to be honest, I just know she's part of the cabal that is the problem.