Haley Jones wants the misconceptions that women’s basketball players make less money in the WNBA than college basketball to stop.
As some of college’s biggest stars, including Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark, weigh their options of going to the WNBA draft or staying for one more year, a lot has been made about the economic impact of moving away from the NIL landscape in college to the professional world of the WNBA. Much of it centers around the misconception that players’ NIL deals disappear as soon as they leave college.
Rookie salaries in the WNBA are currently around $70,000 a year, depending on when a player was picked in the draft.
Jones, who graduated from Stanford last year and was the No. 7 pick in the 2023 draft to Atlanta, said Tuesday that she didn’t lose any money going into the WNBA.
“Moving from collegiate to the WNBA, there’s a lot of misconceptions,” she said. When asked explicitly about losing NIL deals, Jones said: “That isn’t the case: the deals carry over, and then you add your salary.”
Doubling down, Jones said that she’s unclear of how the misconceptions started.
“I don’t know where that came from,” she said, before Sydney Colson chimed in to say that “it came from men.”
"Spread the gospel, please!"
— ELA_CBS Sports (@Erica_L_Ayala) February 29, 2024
"I don't really know where that came from ..."
"Men! It came from men!"
WNBA & Athletes Unlimited Basketball players Haley Jones, Lexie Brown, & Sydney Colson set the record straight on #NIL vs #WNBA endorsements. @WeNeedToTalk @CBSSportsCBB pic.twitter.com/PjtiznFfuT