The WNBA is at a crossroads. With the Collective Bargaining Agreement set to expire after the 2025 season, the league is entering one of the most critical negotiations in its history. Behind the scenes, tensions are growing — not only between players and league executives but within the player community itself.

An Honest Convo About WNBA CBA Negotiations, Phee, and Cathy Engelbert

As stars like Napheesa “Phee” Collier take public aim at Commissioner Cathy Engelbert, the stakes couldn’t be higher. This is not just about contracts or salary caps anymore. It’s about respect, accountability, and the future of women’s basketball as a professional force.

For years, players have quietly shouldered the imbalance between their rising cultural impact and the league’s conservative financial policies. The WNBA has experienced explosive visibility thanks to stars like Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, A’ja Wilson, and Collier herself, yet the players’ share of that success remains modest.

The current CBA, negotiated in 2020, was a step forward at the time — providing higher salaries, improved maternity leave, and better travel standards. But since then, the game has changed. Viewership, sponsorship, and social media engagement have skyrocketed, and players feel it’s time their compensation and treatment reflect that new reality.

At the center of the storm is Napheesa Collier, one of the league’s brightest stars and a voice that refuses to stay quiet. Collier has become the face of player frustration, calling out what she perceives as dismissive and corporate leadership from Commissioner Engelbert

. In recent weeks, Collier canceled a planned meeting with the commissioner, accusing her of treating player concerns as a PR exercise rather than a genuine dialogue. Collier’s blunt words — calling Engelbert’s leadership “the worst in the world” — have echoed across social media, sparking both admiration and controversy. Some see her as a truth-teller, others as a rebel risking unity during a delicate time.

Collier’s frustrations aren’t isolated. Many players share her sentiment that the WNBA’s leadership has prioritized business optics over player welfare. The ongoing issues with charter flights, player scheduling, and offseason expectations have become flashpoints in the broader debate.

Engelbert has repeatedly said that expansion, partnerships, and television deals are key to long-term sustainability — but players argue that the league can’t afford to grow outward while neglecting the people on the inside. It’s a philosophical divide: one side views the WNBA as a brand still in “growth mode,” while the other sees it as a professional league that deserves full respect today, not in some hypothetical future.

Cathy Engelbert’s leadership, once hailed as a turning point for the WNBA, is now under heavy scrutiny. When she took over in 2019, her business background from Deloitte gave many hope that she could elevate the league’s profile and financial stability. To her credit, she has overseen the expansion of teams, secured new sponsorships, and brokered media deals that have brought the league unprecedented visibility.

WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert vows to repair player relationships after  criticism by Collier | wthr.com

Yet, those achievements now stand in contrast to the growing unrest among the players who feel unheard. Engelbert’s critics say she speaks in corporate language about “market growth” and “strategic partnerships” while failing to address the emotional and physical realities of professional athletes who fly commercial, play back-to-back games, and still have to compete overseas to make ends meet.

The recent exchange between Engelbert and Collier is a microcosm of a larger cultural rift. Engelbert reportedly told players they should appreciate the platform the WNBA provides, suggesting that their off-court opportunities — sponsorships, endorsements, and personal branding — are byproducts of the league’s structure.

To many players, this came across as tone-deaf, even insulting. They argue that their personal brands, hard work, and public personas are what make the WNBA marketable in the first place. When Engelbert later said she would “do better” in communicating and listening, the statement landed as a half-measure rather than a solution.

Meanwhile, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has acknowledged the mounting tension, subtly urging both sides to repair trust. Silver, whose office technically oversees the WNBA, admitted that “relationship issues must be repaired” for the league to continue growing. His comments highlight how fragile the situation has become.

The WNBA is one of the fastest-growing sports properties in North America, but it’s also one of the most vulnerable. A lockout or stalled CBA agreement could undo years of hard-earned progress. And with the players’ association becoming increasingly unified and vocal, Engelbert’s ability to bridge the gap will determine whether she survives this storm.

For players like Collier, the fight is deeply personal. She’s not just advocating for herself but for a generation of athletes who want to make the WNBA a sustainable career, not a stepping stone. Many players still rely on overseas contracts to supplement their income, even though those opportunities come with risk, fatigue, and, in some cases, political instability.

The irony isn’t lost on them — at a time when women’s basketball is finally thriving domestically, players are still forced to look abroad to make a living wage. The new CBA, in their view, must finally fix that imbalance once and for all.

But the challenge lies in balancing ambition with financial reality. The WNBA has indeed grown — attendance, streaming, and merchandise sales are up — but the league’s overall revenue pool remains limited compared to major men’s sports. Engelbert argues that sustainability must come before massive pay increases.

Players counter that the league’s conservative approach stifles its own potential. They point to examples like the NWSL (National Women’s Soccer League) and women’s tennis, where bold investment decisions and revenue-sharing models have helped elevate both product and player satisfaction. The debate isn’t about whether the WNBA can afford to evolve; it’s about whether it can afford not to.

WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert on new CBA negotiations

If the upcoming negotiations fail, the league could face its first lockout — a nightmare scenario for everyone involved. A work stoppage would not only disrupt the 2026 season but also risk alienating fans at a moment when public interest in women’s sports has never been higher. For the players, walking out would be painful but potentially necessary. For Engelbert and the WNBA board, it would signal a leadership failure that might force a reckoning at the top. Both sides know what’s at stake, but their definitions of “success” remain dangerously misaligned.

Ultimately, this is more than a business disagreement — it’s a battle over who controls the story of women’s basketball. The players believe they are the WNBA: its heart, its product, its brand. The executives believe they are its architects, responsible for building the infrastructure that keeps it alive.

Somewhere between those two truths lies the path forward. The next few months will reveal whether that middle ground can be found — or whether the growing rift between Phee and Cathy Engelbert becomes the fault line that defines an era.

WNBA denies report commissioner Cathy Engelbert could resign after CBA  negotiations: 'Categorically false' - Yahoo Sports

What’s certain is that this fight matters. It’s not just about money or media deals. It’s about redefining what it means to be a professional woman athlete in 2025 — not someone who has to beg for better flights or justify her worth, but someone who commands respect by right. For the WNBA, this CBA could be the blueprint for a new era of equality and professionalism.

For Phee, it’s personal. For Cathy Engelbert, it’s existential. And for fans, it’s a reminder that the battle for progress never happens quietly — it happens when someone finally decides to demand more.