• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Adam Silver Says He Could Join WNBA CBA Negotiations

The NBA commissioner said he’d do “whatever is necessary” on the CBA, while Breanna Stewart said his presence would be welcome.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

NBA commissioner Adam Silver has a lot on his plate. 

Roughly eight weeks into the season, he’s already facing a gambling scandal, an investigation into the Clippers for alleged salary-cap circumvention, and the league’s potential future in Europe. 

On Tuesday night, Silver vowed to take on another high-level item on his to-do list: the WNBA’s collective bargaining agreement.

“We’re available to do whatever is necessary to help get a deal done,” Silver said ahead of the Knicks’ NBA Cup win over the Spurs. “I’m encouraged by the fact they extended the deadline once again into January. Presumably the sides wouldn’t have been willing to do that unless they thought there was a constructive path to getting a deal done.” 

Later in his nearly two-minute-long answer Silver said, “I remain optimistic we’ll get something done.” 

The WNBA and WNBPA are more than a year into negotiations for a new “transformational” CBA and coming up on a Jan. 9 deadline, the result of a second extension. As both sides continue to exchange proposals—with sources telling Front Office Sports meetings are taking place almost daily—players are not feeling as hopeful as Silver. 

During a three-day USA Basketball camp at Duke last weekend, the WNBPA’s first vice president Kelsey Plum used the word “disheartening” to characterize the state of negotiations. On a call with reporters Wednesday, three-time WNBA champion Breanna Stewart took Plum’s sentiments a step further. 

“More often than not we’re the ones that are willing to compromise and they still aren’t budging,” Stewart, who also serves as a vice president on the union’s executive committee, said. “So if they are not going to budge, we’re going to get to this point where we’re going to be at a standoff. That’s kind of where we’re at right now.” 

The salary model has remained the crux of both sides’ discontent. 

Earlier this month a WNBA proposal included a $1 million max base salary, according to multiple sources familiar with negotiations. In addition, the league proposed a revenue-sharing model that would give players 50% of a revenue metric that would not include all revenue and would have some expenses deducted. Under this proposed model, players would end up receiving less than 15% of the league’s total revenue, these same sources said. 

The salary cap would increase from $1.5 million to $5 million under the league’s latest proposal, bringing the average salary to about $417,000. Projected earnings with the league’s proposed revenue-sharing model factored in would push the average to more than $500,000 and the max over $1.2 million.  

The union has since countered with a proposal seeking roughly 30% of all team and league revenue, sources familiar with negotiations confirmed to FOS

“What we’re doing right now isn’t really getting us anywhere,” Stewart said. “If that means Adam and Mark need to come to the table, we’re more than happy to have that,” she said, referring to Silver and deputy NBA commissioner Mark Tatum. 

In addition to swapping economic proposals, the union has also proposed that teams be permitted to add two developmental players. WNBA coaches and executives have been vocal in their support of expanded rosters, including during competition meetings in November. 

Erasing the core designation was another non-salary proposal made by the WNBPA, along with improved parental leave for non-birthing parents, reimbursement for mental health care costs, and improved staffing requirements. 

“We know as players how important it is to play and to be on the court,” Stewart said. “But at the same time, if we’re not going to be valued the way that we know we should be, in the way that every kind of number situation tells us, then we’re just not going to do something that doesn’t make sense.” 

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NBA Will Finally Decide on Expansion Next Year

Three team sales earlier this year halted years of expansion talks.
May 22, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; NBA commissioner is Adam Silver presents Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (not pictured) with the Michael Jordan Trophy for winning the most valuable player award for the 2024-25 season before game two of the western conference finals for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center.

Adam Silver Praises Amazon NBA Coverage, With Subtle Jab at Others 

Silver praised Amazon’s coverage while taking veiled shots at league broadcast partners

MLB Succession Questions Rise With Manfred Confidant’s Departure

A key executive in the commissioner’s office will leave at year’s end.
Knicks

Knicks Won’t Hang NBA Cup Banner After All

The Lakers and Bucks both raised banners after winning the tournament.

Featured Today

How Pickleball Became One Massive Private-Equity Rollup

Pickleball roads lead back to billionaire Tom Dundon.
Dec 9, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) dribbles against Toronto Raptors guard Jamal Shead (23) during the first half at the 2025-26 NBA Emirates Cup at Scotiabank Arena
December 13, 2025

The Lucrative NBA Cup Is Here to Stay

The in-season tournament, launched in 2023, is turning into a staple.
The Los Angeles Chargers host executives from UCLA Health on Wednesday, August 7, 2024 at The Bolt in El Segundo, CA.
December 7, 2025

The Multibillion-Dollar Business of Pro Athlete Recovery

What started as ice baths has evolved into a multibillion-dollar industry.
Big League Wiffle Ball
November 29, 2025

Celebrity-Backed Wiffle Ball Has Big-League Aspirations

Big League Wiffle Ball team owners include Kevin Costner and David Adelman.
Giannis

NBA Defends Schedule Amid Injury-Riddled Start to Season

Adam Silver spoke ahead of the NBA Cup final in Las Vegas.
Dec 13, 2022; Lusail, Qatar; Argentina fans pose for a photograph before the semifinal match against Croatia during the 2022 World Cup at Lusail Stadium.
December 16, 2025

FIFA Responds to World Cup Ticket Backlash With New $60 Tier

A limited number of $60 tickets will be made available for every match.
December 17, 2025

World Cup Prize Pool Hits $727M, but Angry Fans Paying a Steeper..

An unprecedented outlay to teams sparks more outrage from fan groups.
Sponsored

Brian Hoyer: Patriots Lessons, NIL Chaos & His Post-NFL Career

The former Patriots QB talks to FOS about college football’s radical transformation.
Chris Paul
December 16, 2025

NBA Trade Chaos Can Officially Start Now

A few players will be trade-eligible only starting Jan. 15.
December 15, 2025

Micah Parsons’s Season-Ending ACL Injury Caps Brutal Stretch for NFL

The season-ending injury adds to one for Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
December 15, 2025

PGA Tour, Cadillac Back at Trump Doral After a Decade Away

The Cadillac Championship will be played in the spring of 2026.
Cincinnati Bengals fans sit in snow-covered seats before the NFL football game between Baltimore Ravens and Cincinnati Bengals at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati on Dec. 14, 2025.
December 15, 2025

NFL Defends Bengals Over Snow-Covered Paycor Stadium Seats

The Bengals were officially eliminated from the playoffs.