Current:Home > FinanceWNBA draft picks now face harsh reality of limited opportunities in small, 12-team league -LondonCapital
WNBA draft picks now face harsh reality of limited opportunities in small, 12-team league
View
Date:2025-04-24 17:48:45
As she gestured to the 2024 WNBA draft class, a group that features the likes of Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, Cameron Brink and a bevy of other stars, ESPN analyst Andraya Carter summed it up perfectly.
“This group changed the game,” she said.
She’s right — or she will be soon. In just a month we’ll see the impact of these young women who are joining the oldest women’s professional sports league when women’s basketball is at an all-time high, more popular than ever. The sport is riding the wave of a tremendously successful and most-viewed Final Four, finally standing in the spotlight after decades of being pushed to the side.
“Women’s basketball is not a fad,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said before the draft started. “We’ve been steadily building this momentum for years.”
The question is, what kind of staying power does this 2024 draft class have?
This year's draft class was the most star-studded since “The Big Three” in 2013, when Brittney Griner, Elena Delle Donne and Skylar Diggins (now Diggins-Smith) went No. 1, 2 and 3 respectively, generating tons of talk and energy around the league.
Eleven years later those three are still around, though each has had individual struggles: Delle Donne has been sidelined by injuries for long stretches of her professional career. Diggins-Smith missed the 2023 season after giving birth, then had a weird and seemingly ugly breakup with the Phoenix Mercury before signing with Seattle. Griner, of course, was wrongfully detained in Russia for nearly a year, her absence glaring and heartbreaking during the 2022 season.
Despite the pauses in their playing careers for whatever reasons, the staying power of those three superstars is noteworthy.
With just 144 roster spots stretching across 12 teams, the WNBA is the toughest professional league in the world to make. (Because of salary cap rules, quite a few teams only carry 11, making the total roster number closer to 136.)
That’s brutal, even for some of the best players in the college game. It’s not uncommon to hear your name called on draft night and then be cut before the first game. Consider that the top pick from 2021, Charli Collier, isn’t in the league anymore. In fact, just seven players from the 2021 draft were on rosters going into last season.
If you're a draftee, you can't like those odds.
Monday night before Caitlin Clark went No. 1, Engelbert reiterated that the league is closer to expansion than not, and said she feels optimistic that it can get to 16 teams by 2028 (the Bay Area expansion team is slated to begin play in 2025).
In the meantime, how many of Monday’s players will be able to actually impact the WNBA? Are there enough spots for them?
Of course we know what Caitlin Clark is going to do in Indiana. And players like Kamilla Cardoso, a mobile 6-foot-7 post, don’t come along very often; she will always find a home on a roster. Cameron Brink’s ability to impact both ends of the floor should help her anchor a WNBA team — in this case, the Los Angeles Sparks — for a long time.
Outside of those examples, there's plenty of room to worry. Not because these young women lack for talent, but because they lack for opportunities.
Lots of players went to what is easily the best situation for them: Dyaisha Fair, an undersized scoring machine from Syracuse, will learn more from Becky Hammon of the Las Vegas Aces than anyone else. Angel Reese and her relentless motor will thrive under new Chicago Sky head coach Teresa Weatherspoon. UCLA’s Charisma Osborne is headed to Phoenix, where the Mercury desperately need some scorers on the low end of the pay scale.
But roster spots are limited. That’s a shame, especially at a time when it feels like there’s no limit on the growth of women’s basketball.
It’s time for the WNBA to step up and get serious about expansion. Actions speak louder than words, as the saying goes. The players are acting, elevating the game every day with their play, from high school to college. The powerbrokers in the WNBA need to stop dragging their heels and name the next round of new — or revived — teams.
The 2024 draft class will be remembered as one of the strongest in the history of the league, a testament to the talent explosion across women’s basketball. But if the majority of these players aren’t on WNBA rosters in three years, that’ll be a loss for everyone.
Then they won’t be the group that changed the game. They’ll just be like so many before them. And that’s no way to grow the game.
veryGood! (95)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Hunter Biden pushes for dismissal of gun case, saying law violates the Second Amendment
- Pennsylvania school choice program criticized as ‘discriminatory’ as lawmakers return to session
- Horoscopes Today, December 11, 2023
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- French opposition lawmakers reject the government’s key immigration bill without debating it
- Bachelor in Paradise’s Kat and John Henry Break Up
- Man charged in Fourth of July parade shooting plans to represent himself at trial
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Miami Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill suffers ankle injury, but returns vs. Tennessee Titans
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Will Levis rallies Titans for 2 late TDs, 28-27 win over Dolphins
- AP PHOTOS: At UN climate talks in Dubai, moments between the meetings
- Work to resume at Tahiti’s legendary Olympic surfing site after uproar over damage to coral reef
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- 'Doctor Who' introduces first Black Doctor, wraps up 60th anniversary with perfect flair
- Social Media Affects Opinions, But Not the Way You Might Think
- Three people die in a crash that authorities discovered while investigating a stolen vehicle
Recommendation
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Wind speeds peaked at 150 mph in swarm of Tennessee tornadoes that left 6 dead, dozens injured
Sarah McLachlan celebrates 30 years of 'Fumbling' with new tour: 'I still pinch myself'
Russia says it will hold presidential balloting in occupied regions of Ukraine next year
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Third Mississippi man is buried in a pauper’s grave without family’s knowledge
Journalists tackle a political what-if: What might a second Trump presidency look like?
2 winning Mega Millions jackpot tickets sold at same California gas station