Openai/6961a2cb-8de8-8010-8e27-911459960dae
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: what should be wnba players be paid if they recieved the same percentage as nba players what would be a good estimat e[edit | edit source]
what should be wnba players be paid if they recieved the same percentage as nba players what would be a good estimat e
Assistant: Here’s a simple estimate of what WNBA players would be paid if they got the same percentage of league revenue that NBA …[edit | edit source]
Here’s a simple estimate of what WNBA players would be paid if they got the same percentage of league revenue that NBA players do — instead of the much smaller share they currently receive:
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- WNBA players currently get about 9–10% of total league revenue under the existing CBA — a tiny slice compared to the NBA. X (formerly Twitter)[3]
- WNBA total revenue is estimated at roughly $180–$200 million per year (including media rights, ticket sales, merchandise, etc.). X (formerly Twitter)[4]
- Current average WNBA salary is roughly $120,000–$150,000 and maximum around $250,000. Yahoo Sports[5]
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Total player pool under 50% share: 🏀 $200 million × 50% = $100 million available for player salaries.
There are 144 active roster spots in the WNBA (12 teams × 12 players).
Average salary under this model: 💡 $100 million ÷ 144 ≈ $694,000 per player per year
Compare that to current numbers:
- Current average: ~$120K–$150K
- Hypothetical average: ~$694K ➡️ That’s roughly 4-6× higher than current averages if revenues stay the same and players get the NBA-style share. X (formerly Twitter)[6]
Top-end/Maximum salaries: If teams structured salaries with tiering (like the NBA does), top stars could be in the $1–2M range or higher, rather than ~$250K now. This tracks with players’ own revenue-share demands in negotiations. Reuters[7]
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If you want, I can also break this down by rookie vs. star earning tiers or show what a salary scale might look like for starting players, mids, and superstars under the 50% revenue-share scenario.
User: what would the number 1 wnba pick get vs what would a udfa get[edit | edit source]
what would the number 1 wnba pick get vs what would a udfa get
Assistant: Here is a clear, realistic estimate of what the 1 WNBA draft pick and a UDFA undrafted free agent would get if the WNBA…[edit | edit source]
Here is a clear, realistic estimate of what the #1 WNBA draft pick and a UDFA (undrafted free agent) would get if the WNBA paid players the same percentage of revenue as the NBA.
If WNBA players received 50% of league revenue (same as NBA players):[edit | edit source]
- Estimated WNBA revenue: $200 million
- Players’ share at 50%: $100 million
- 144 roster spots
Average salary ≈ $694,000 per player
But like the NBA, salaries would be tiered. Rookies would not earn the average — they’d have a scale.
In the NBA:[edit | edit source]
- #1 overall pick makes about 150% of the rookie scale slot.
- UDFA earns the minimum salary, usually a 1–2 year non-guaranteed deal.
Apply that same logic to WNBA numbers.
Using NBA-style tiering:[edit | edit source]
- Would likely earn between 1.5× and 2× the average rookie salary.[edit | edit source]
- Estimated rookie pool might be around 20% of total player salaries.
- If rookies average ~$500K, the #1 pick would earn:
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Using NBA logic:
- UDFAs get non-guaranteed minimum deals
- Typically 50–60% of the rookie scale minimum
So:
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- The #1 pick would be close to a $1M player.
- A UDFA would still make good money (~$350K+), not barely above minimum.
- Salary structure would reflect actual market value rather than artificially suppressed caps.
If you want, I can also build:
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Just tell me what format you want.[edit | edit source]
User: Yes do them all and feel free to use any format ill adjust .[edit | edit source]
Yes do them all and feel free to use any format ill adjust . Just give me the information
Assistant: Perfect — here is everything laid out cleanly:[edit | edit source]
Perfect — here is everything laid out cleanly: ✔️ Full hypothetical WNBA rookie scale (picks 1–36) ✔️ UDFA estimates ✔️ Hypothetical salary cap + max contract structure ✔️ Comparison to current WNBA numbers
All based on the model where WNBA players receive 50% of league revenue, just like the NBA.
To keep numbers consistent:[edit | edit source]
- Estimated league revenue: $200,000,000
- Player share at 50% = $100,000,000
- 144 roster spots → Average salary ≈ $694,000
- Rookie scale pool = 20% of total salaries = $20M
- 36 drafted rookies → average rookie salary ≈ $555K
The #1 pick would be higher than the average rookie, the late 2nd-round pick lower.
(Assumes a 2-year guaranteed base with team options for years 3–4, same as NBA structure.)[edit | edit source]
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In the NBA, UDFAs often sign near the minimum or accept two-way deals.[edit | edit source]
Using that structure:
- Base: $300,000–$350,000[edit | edit source]
- Year 2 non-guaranteed
- Incentives for games played / making roster
- $200,000 base salary[edit | edit source]
- Up to $350,000 with active roster days
To maintain NBA-like balance:[edit | edit source]
- Total cap pool: $100,000,000[edit | edit source]
- 12 teams
- → Team salary cap ~ $8.3 million per team
- Salary cap: $8.3M[edit | edit source]
- Luxury tax line: $9.0M
- Hard cap: $10.0M
Based on NBA percentages:[edit | edit source]
- Max Contract Tier 1 (7+ years) → 35% of cap = $2.9M
- Max Contract Tier 2 (4–6 years) → 30% of cap = $2.5M
- Max Contract Tier 3 (0–3 years) → 25% of cap = $2.1M
This matches the NBA structure almost perfectly.
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If the WNBA paid players the same revenue percentage as the NBA:[edit | edit source]
#1 pick earns almost $1M yearly — instead of $75K.[edit | edit source]
$300K+ instead of borderline-minimum deals.[edit | edit source]
Teams manage legitimate roster building, free agency, trades, extensions, luxury tax.[edit | edit source]
$2M+ contracts end need for overseas "second job" for top players.[edit | edit source]
If you want, I can also make:
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###[edit | edit source]
Just tell me which one you want next.
User: So what would a potential a'ja wilson deal look like[edit | edit source]
So what would a potential a'ja wilson deal look like
[edit | edit source]
Here’s a clean, realistic hypothetical contract for A’ja Wilson if the WNBA paid players using NBA-style revenue share rules (50% of league revenue + $8.3M team cap).
We’ll model it using the NBA “supermax” structure, which applies to:
- former MVP ✔️
- former DPOY ✔️
- Finals MVP ✔️
- All-WNBA 1st team ✔️
- Franchise cornerstone ✔️
A’ja checks every box, so she qualifies for the Tier 1 Max (35% of team cap).
🔥 A’JA WILSON — HYPOTHETICAL SUPERMAX CONTRACT[edit | edit source]
Using:
- Team salary cap: $8.3 million
- Tier 1 max = 35% of cap
- Yearly raises = 8% (NBA standard for staying with your current team)
Year-by-Year Breakdown[edit | edit source]
| Year | Base Salary (35% of Cap w/ raises) | | ---------------------- | ---------------------------------- | | Year 1 | $2,905,000 | | Year 2 | $3,137,000 | | Year 3 | $3,388,000 | | Year 4 | $3,659,000 | | Year 5 (player option) | $3,952,000 |
🧮 Total Contract Value[edit | edit source]
👉 5 years, $17,041,000[edit | edit source]
This would be the largest contract in the WNBA under a revenue-sharing model.
⭐ WHY THIS WORKS FOR A’JA[edit | edit source]
This type of deal reflects:
✔️ MVP production[edit | edit source]
A’ja is clearly the best player in the league.
✔️ “Face of the league” status[edit | edit source]
Star players in NBA get supermax deals to keep them with the franchise.
✔️ Longevity + awards[edit | edit source]
Her résumé is comparable to NBA supermax qualifiers.
✔️ Franchise loyalty[edit | edit source]
Teams can offer higher raises and more years to keep their stars.
✔️ Performance bonuses[edit | edit source]
A’ja would easily qualify for incentives (see below).
💰 Potential Bonuses (Modeled After NBA Incentives)[edit | edit source]
These would stack on top of the base salary:
| Incentive | Amount | | ---------------------- | --------- | | MVP | +$250,000 | | DPOY | +$150,000 | | Finals MVP | +$150,000 | | All-WNBA First Team | +$100,000 | | Team makes WNBA Finals | +$200,000 | | Team wins title | +$250,000 |
If A’ja has a dominant year, she could easily earn:
⭐ $3.5M–$4.0M in a single season[edit | edit source]
📌 OPTIONAL EXTENSION (If signed early)[edit | edit source]
If Vegas extends her early, NBA rules allow a “supermax extension” at 140% of last salary.
For A’ja that would look like:
- 4 years, ~$16M (after her current deal ends)
📊 COMPARED TO HER CURRENT WNBA DEAL[edit | edit source]
| Contract Type | Annual Salary | | ---------------------------- | ------------------ | | Current real WNBA salary | ~$232,000 | | Hypothetical supermax salary | $2.9M–$4M per year |
She is currently making less than 10% of what she would under a revenue-share system.
🧨 WHAT THIS MEANS FOR THE LEAGUE[edit | edit source]
If WNBA revenue distribution was NBA-style:
- A’ja becomes a $3M–$4M per year player
- Top stars like Stewart, Griner, Ionescu, Clark, Reese, Boston earn similar tiered max deals
- Roster players and UDFAs earn $300K–$700K
- Overseas play becomes optional instead of mandatory
It completely changes the economics of women’s basketball.
If you want, I can also build:
🔹 A hypothetical Las Vegas Aces full roster + cap sheet[edit | edit source]
🔹 Extensions for other stars (Clark, Ionescu, Boston, Stewie)[edit | edit source]
🔹 What the entire WNBA would look like with supermax contracts[edit | edit source]
Just tell me who you want next.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "WNBA Pay Estimate". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "Yahoo Sports". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "X (formerly Twitter)". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "X (formerly Twitter)". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "Yahoo Sports". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "X (formerly Twitter)". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "Reuters". reuters.com. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ↑ "The Red Line Project". The Red Line Project. 2025-11-04. Retrieved 2026-01-10.