
Las Vegas Aces star Kelsey Plum wants to correct the narrative around the WNBA’s fight for equal pay.
WNBA players aren’t looking for the same salaries as their NBA counterparts. They’re looking to earn an equal percentage of their league’s shared revenue, as Plum said Monday on The Residency Podcast.
“We’re not asking to get paid what the men get paid,” she said. “We’re asking to get paid the same percentage of revenue shared.”
She called the idea that the WNBA players want to get paid the same amount as NBA players a “huge misconception.”
“In the NBA, they have percentages of revenue shared for the players — so, jersey sales, obviously their TV contracts,” Plum said. “But that’s because their CBA negotiates, where the owners are making certain types of money, [the players] get that as well. In the WNBA, that’s not the case.”
The NBA’s CBA splits revenue evenly between players and owners.
Under the WNBA’s collective bargaining agreement, players benefit from revenue sharing — but they get a 50-50 split of incremental revenue, not all revenue, per Her Hoops Stats. And the WNBPA receives 50 percent of revenue from player-specific jersey sales.
“I don’t think I should get paid the same as LeBron,” Plum said. “But the percentage of revenue — like for example: they sell my jersey in Mandalay Bay, I don’t get a dime. So that’s the stuff we’re talking about.”
Players won’t be able to negotiate for those changes until 2025, which is when the current CBA expires. But given the recent growth of the league, the WNBA landscape could look a lot different by then.
“We’re young. We’re only 25 years in, the NBA is at 100,” she said. “Where we’re at, at 25, we’re way past where the NBA was. We don’t forget that though, we compare where we’re at now to where the NBA is now.
“My goal is, by the time I leave the league I would like to see it a lot better than I found it,” she said. “I’m here to ruffle some feathers. If you want change, you’ve got to be able to see the change. If I have to take a couple of shots for someone else to be able to [do something], I’m all for it.”

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Sweden Legend Magda Eriksson Announces Retirement from International Soccer

Sweden veteran defender Magda Eriksson is hanging up her international boots to focus on her health, with the 32-year-old officially announcing her retirement from her national team on Sunday.
Eriksson will continue competing at the domestic level for her German club, Bayern Munich.
The longtime captain sat out the most recent international window due to a head injury, watching as world No. 3 Sweden fell to No. 1 Spain in the two-leg 2025 Nations League semifinals.
“It’s by far the toughest decision I’ve ever made,” Eriksson said in her social media announcement. “But I’m listening to my body and mind instead of my heart.”
“I’ve landed in the fact that unfortunately it’s a decision that has to be made.”
After an 11-year career with the Swedish senior national team, Eriksson retires as a two-time Olympic silver medalist, earning those podium finishes in Rio in 2016 and at the delayed 2020 Tokyo Games.
Often leading Sweden through major tournaments where early domination dissolved into a third-place finish, Eriksson also helped her team eke onto the World Cup podium in both 2019 and 2023.
“It is heavy news,” said Sweden head coach Tony Gustavsson after Eriksson announced her international retirement, calling her “one of our most important players for a long time.”
“[Magda’s] professionalism, courage, and heart have left a strong mark on the national team,” he added.
Chelsea FC’s £1 million Alyssa Thompson Gamble Pays Off Across WSL and UWCL Play

Chelsea FC’s £1 million gamble is paying dividends, as USWNT rising star Alyssa Thompson continued her goal-scoring momentum for the six-time defending WSL champs on Sunday.
The young forward found the back of the net in the ninth minute of the Blues’ 1-1 Sunday draw with Liverpool, solidifying her status as a decisive attacking threat for her new club.
“You can see how much talent she has and the quality she brings to the team,” Chelsea manager Sonia Bompastor said of Thompson earlier this month. “She’s improving game after game, becoming more connected to her teammates, and understanding the way we want to play better.”
Thompson left NWSL side Angel City for Chelsea on a then-record £1 million transfer fee in early September, with the 21-year-old going on to notch three goals and one assist in four matches across both WSL and Champions League play.
“Being able to play with players that are the best in the world is an amazing opportunity,” said the striker. “I want to learn, grow, and develop a lot. I feel like Chelsea is such an amazing environment to do that in.”
Beyond individual accomplishment, Thompson’s success underscores Chelsea’s depth as they continue to hunt domestic and continental honors on a now-34 match WSL unbeaten streak — while also looking to potentially draw more USWNT stars away from the NWSL.
Women’s Pro Baseball League to Play 2026 Debut WPBL Season at Neutral Illinois Stadium

Women’s professional baseball has landed a home base, with Front Office Sports reporting on Monday that the newly formed WPBL will play the entirety of its 2026 debut season at Robin Roberts Stadium in Springfield, Illinois.
The incoming league prioritized a neutral venue without an existing baseball team to house its four inaugural clubs — New York, Boston, LA, and San Francisco — for its first campaign, with barnstorming games also planned for each team market.
“Our sport is for everybody,” WPBL co-founder Keith Stein told FOS. “It’s for middle America, everybody. We thought, ‘Our teams are on these two coasts, it would be good to be in the middle of the country.'”
Founded in 2024 as the first professional women’s baseball outfit in the US since 1954, the WPBL will hold its first-ever draft on Thursday, with the league’s four teams drawing from a pool of 120 eligible players.
The WPBL recently fielded an oversubscribed Series A investment round, telling FOS that they’re closing a $3 million raise with another round planned ahead of its August 2026 season-opener.
Each 30-player team will operate under a $95,000 salary cap for the first year, with the league also covering living costs throughout the seven-week season as well as giving players a percentage of sponsorship funds.
How to watch the first-ever WPBL Draft
The 2025 WPBL Draft kicks off at 8 PM ET on Thursday, with live coverage streaming across the league’s Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube channels.
Aces Coach Becky Hammon Says WNBA May See ‘Change in Leadership’ Amid CBA Talks

Las Vegas Aces boss Becky Hammon spoke her mind last week, telling CNBC Sport that the WNBA might need “a change in leadership” for the league’s CBA talks to successfully progress.
“I just think [player relations] might be too fractured at this point, but we’ll see,” Hammon said, while also noting that she’s had only limited interactions with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert.
Citing Engelbert’s “private conversations…with individual players — or lack of the conversations,” Hammon described the commissioner’s current relationship with players as “rocky” while describing her widely criticized leadership style.
“I don’t know if she can ever regret, retract, and get that traction back from those conversations,” the Aces boss posited.
“When the players speak, people need to sit up and listen,” she continued. “I think [Engelbert is] sitting up and listening now.”
Hammon also voiced support for Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier after the five-time All-Star described the WNBA as having the “worst leadership in the world” in her now-viral 2025 exit interview.
“I completely agree with Napheesa that the players should be making more than coaches,” the Las Vegas sideline leader — who publicly earns seven figures per year — continued. “They’re due for a huge increase in salary, and it’s got to be something that is sustainable. That’s the biggest thing you got to remember, that this league is still a young league.”
Ultimately, while the 2025 WNBA season is over, CBA concerns loom large over the league’s current offseason and 2026 campaign, leaving Hammon and others looking to avoid a lockout as the November 30th extension deadline nears.
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