With the deadline for a new collective bargaining agreement looming and a deal not close to being reached, the WNBA proposed to players a 30-day extension to continue negotiations for a new deal, sources confirmed to The Post Tuesday night.
We’ve got you covered on the Liberty beat
Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Madeline Kenney about all things Liberty and WNBA.
tRY IT NOWIt’s unclear, though, whether the WNBA players association will agree to the extension.
As of now, the CBA is set to expire Friday and players have been bracing for a potential work stoppage as several big issues, including revenue sharing, remain unsettled.
The last time a new CBA was brokered in 2019, the two sides agreed to a 60-day extension and finalized an agreement in January 2020.
As of Tuesday night, a union source told The Post and other outlets that “the players may be willing to consider an extension under the right circumstances,” which they say “do not yet exist.”
The Post’s question on what exactly the “right circumstances” would be was left unanswered as of this story’s publication.
The unresolved CBA matter was in the news earlier Tuesday, when WNBPA senior advisor and legal counsel Erin D. Drake said on The Athletic’s “No Offseason” podcast that an agreement wouldn’t be reached by the Friday deadline.
