Veteran coach and Hall of Famer Nancy Lieberman credits guard Caitlin Clark with catalyzing the WNBA’s first-ever collective bargaining agreement, a deal that has unlocked unprecedented salary growth and benefits for the league’s athletes.
A New Era of Investment
The agreement introduces a revenue‑sharing model that allocates roughly twenty percent of league and team earnings to players, raises the salary cap, and adds a suite of new benefits, marking the first time the WNBA has tied compensation so directly to its financial performance.
Clark entered the professional ranks in 2024 after a record‑setting college career at Iowa, instantly drawing massive television audiences and selling out arenas across the country. Her presence sparked a national conversation that reshaped how the league is perceived and marketed.
Early Season Hurdles
The Indiana Fever, Clark’s new team, have started the 2026 season with a modest win‑loss record, but Lieberman remains confident that the club will gel as the schedule progresses, noting that the squad’s chemistry will improve with time.
Comparisons to All‑Time Icons
Lieberman draws parallels between Clark’s cultural footprint and the impact of Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, arguing that just as those legends commanded attention whenever they took the court, Clark now becomes the focal point of every matchup.
The ripple effect extends beyond the court, influencing sponsorship deals, media rights, and the broader conversation about investment in women’s sports, positioning the WNBA for sustained growth.