WookieOnRitalin wrote:Number one insulator to poverty is marriage.
The living beyond my means and complaining about it is bound to fall on deaf ears to otherwise people you NEED to be fans of YOUR sport that has YET to turn a profit. The league is on track to lose $50 million this season.
https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/despite-recent-success-with-caitlin-clark-wnba-expected-to-lose-50-millionThe league is just a loser and has been a loser. The new TV deal should help provide more money, but the league has an upward fight to profitability. The WNBA is a charity league. I do not even know what level of profitability the league can expect.
This was true in the past, but now the larger problem is the NBA is assigning an arbitrary value that would appear WAY below market value for the media rights for the WNBA which they negotiated in with the NBA rights. The WNBA rights are allocated a price over the next 10 years of 1/44th of the NBA rights which is considerably less than the number of eyeballs they received this year.
Part of this is simply a timing issue, perhaps if this year happened earlier they would have split out the rights earlier.
Women, in general, are not interested in the WNBA. Women could easily support the league, but they don't. They could spend the $87/ticket and go support the players, but they don't. They would rather spend their dollars elsewhere. I think this idea is relatively well known and then men get yelled at for not supporting the league and we are the problem.
The league has not resolved the majority of the problems that impact its profitability which is the game itself. The WNBA game does not carry the same level of entertainment value. The game needs to change. Imagine women playing baseball with the same rules and park sizes as the men.
Would people watch it or would it be difficult to watch? Yeah, but women are great at getting on base. Hey! There is a female pitcher who can throw 70 mph (GWR)! The league would be slow. Homeruns would be non existent. But we might have a several .400 hitters. Then the argument we get to hear is...
"The WMLB has more women who hit over .400 than in the men's league. We should be paid just as well as our male counterparts."
There is a fundamental reason women do not play baseball or a variation of it (softball) with the same rules and field size as men. The majority of sports vary rules to promote engagement and entertainment in their female variations.
This is still the problem with the WNBA. Until it decides to get out of the dark ages and improve the entertainment value of the game.
I have yet to find a compelling argument from anyone that contrasts that claim especially as it marches towards long term profitability and growth for the league.

The WNBA finals game 5 drew 3.3M viewers, their average national game drew 1.3M viewers per year. They aren't being compensated with a TV deal reflecting that, again, likely due to timing more than ill intent. However, your points are extraordinarily dated, irrelevant and ignorant of the current challenges with the league and why they exist.
But to counteract your specific points, NCAA basketball is a much lower caliber tier than the G-League, and yet it is worth a ton more money. It's probably a lower talent level than 20 other leagues in the world that all make less money than it does. Talent level isn't necessarily what sells. Money is related to how much marketing you can do and how much people care. The WNBA has a lot of people care this year. Their ratings were about 1/3rd of the NBA in the regular season and 1/4 of the NBA in the playoffs. If you factor out for total games played, then you get to 1/18th in the regular season and 1/20th for post season. Their media rights are going to be correlated at 1/44th of the NBA in the new deal which based on present ratings of both leagues is underselling their rights by more than half, which means based on eyeballs, their fair market value should be ~600M per year instead of 250M per year going forward.
Which means, if they were getting equitable distribution of their media rights, instead of losing 50M per year, the league would be up 550M or an average profit of 55M per team.
The problem isn't the talent level (because talent level isn't necessarily the biggest driver) or the interest right now (which is extremely robust). The problem is they don't control their own media rights and aren't getting an equitable deal.