Sports
WNBA players wisely use All


INDIANAPOLIS — The WNBA All-Star Weekend represented the league at its peak: a massive mid-season showcase featuring the best players in the world, hosted in a city that has become synonymous with the rapid explosion of women’s sports.
But the celebrations took place in front of a backdrop of labor uncertainty. The league and the players’ union remain far apart in negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement, with the current CBA set to expire on Oct. 31, 2025. With all eyes on the league, the All-Stars emerged for pregame warmups Saturday to reveal a message on their shirts: “Pay Us What You Owe Us.”
The players had a breakfast meeting the morning of the All-Star game when they collectively decided to wear the shirts. The shirt is available for sale on the players’ union’s Instagram account, with all proceeds going to the WNBPA and the players.
After years of fighting an existential battle for the survival of the league, WNBA players enter this bargaining cycle with a rare power: leverage. The league is generating record revenue, it’s expanding, and it’s become part of the national consciousness. Now is the time for the players to cash in on what they have brought to the table. They want a business model that allows them to share in the growth of the WNBA and direct more of the revenue towards salaries and player experience.
Advertisement
“We see the growth in the league and as it stands, the current salary system is not really paying us what we’re owed,” said union president Nneka Ogwumike, a Seattle Storm forward. “We want to be able to have that fair share moving forward, especially as we see all of the investment going in, and we want to be able to have our salaries be reflected in a structure that makes sense for us.”
The league is in a period of hyper growth, as commissioner Cathy Engelbert illuminated in her annual mid-season address. Viewership is up 23 percent year over year, attendance 26 percent, and merchandise sales 40 percent. Money is pouring into the league — via media rights, expansion fees and other avenues — but players need to secure a piece of the growing business before the WNBA enters a sustainability mode.
Their prominent message on one of the league’s biggest nights, and their commitment to a united front, shows that the union understands its strength and is taking control of the narrative.
Doing so on All-Star weekend isn’t just about getting all of the players in one room together, though the breakfast meeting composed mostly of union leadership couldn’t have happened if the players weren’t all in one place. The timing is also important to engage fans when they are paying attention and when players are speaking to a nationally-televised audience on ABC. This effort allowed players to tap into the community that supports them and wants to help.
At a panel earlier Saturday, fans asked Dawn Staley, Sydney Colson and Kate Martin how they could make a difference in the negotiations. Fans brought “Pay the Players” signs to the game, and Mystics guard Brittney Sykes displayed one visible on the broadcast behind Engelbert during postgame interviews. The crowd also drowned out Englebert’s speech with chants of “pay them.”
The WNBA All-Stars came out wearing warmup shirts that said, “Pay Us What You Owe Us.”
The players’ union met with the WNBA Thursday and came away frustrated with the economic model proposed by the league.
🎥 @AliyahFun pic.twitter.com/rtM3cckEvm
— The Athletic (@TheAthletic) July 20, 2025
“It’s huge to have the fans backing us,” union vice president Napheesa Collier said. “A lot of things are the court of public opinion, and it does matter what people think, they of course, at the league recognize that as well, so adding that pressure is really great for us.”
Players are not new to public activism. As WNBPA first vice president Kelsey Plum said, this is a resilient group that was politically outspoken during the Georgia Senate race in 2020. They understand the unity it takes to achieve a desired outcome.
Advertisement
Fashion as a visual forum for protest is a familiar tactic. The Minnesota Lynx wore T-shirts that said “Change starts with us” and “Black Lives Matter” on the back after the police killing of Philando Castile in 2016. The entire league wore Breonna Taylor’s name on their jerseys in the 2020 WNBA bubble after she was killed by a police officer. And in 2022, the WNBA All-Stars changed at halftime into Brittney Griner jerseys to bring attention to her detention in Russia.
At a moment that is critical to determine their future, players don’t want to leave any stones unturned. They need participation from throughout the union, which is why a record number of players showed up to the bargaining meeting. For instance, Satou Sabally was unable to play in the All-Star Game but flew to Indiana on Thursday to attend the negotiations. Players have to publicly apply pressure on the league, using their collective, consistent messaging and their fan bases to rally behind them. They are preparing for a lockout, putting money away in case negotiations stall.
They are appealing to Engelbert’s legacy: Does she want to be the commissioner who presided over the most significant growth in women’s sports history, or the one who oversaw a work stoppage?
The wording of “owe us” on the T-shirts was clarifying. The players have talked about getting what is fair, but this was a crucial change in the strategy to signify that a piece of the business already belongs to them.
“We’re going to continue to push for everything that we’ve earned,” Liberty guard Natasha Cloud said. “The word ‘earned’ is something that needs to be highlighted. I think a lot of times you get told to just continue to take crumbs and be thankful for what we have,and that’s just not the case anymore.”
By hijacking a tentpole event for the league, players are expressing that they will not settle. They can’t afford to do anything less.
(Photo of Brittney Sykes: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)
Sports
Volleyball Welcomes Four – Vanderbilt University Athletics – Official Athletics Website
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Vanderbilt volleyball will welcome four transfer student-athletes to its roster this spring, the program announced Friday.
“Bringing this transfer class to Nashville will be a defining moment in our young program’s history,” head coach Anders Nelson said. “All four student-athletes will raise the level of athleticism in our gym immediately, but more importantly to us, they’re competitive, driven and academically gifted. We cannot wait to integrate them into our program and get to work on realizing Team 2’s potential.”
Carly Hendrickson, a 6-foot-2 outside from Cincinnati, Ohio, will join the Commodores as a graduate transfer from UCLA. In 2025, Hendrickson appeared in 29 matches and 101 sets, recording 25 service aces. This season, she registered nine kills and six blocks vs. Oral Roberts, hitting at a .412 clip. She recorded a career-high10 kills vs. Texas State. To end the season, she served up a pair of aces in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Hendrickson will return to the SEC in 2026 after beginning her collegiate career at Florida.
Molly Kate “MK” Patten, a 6-foot-5 opposite, comes to Nashville after spending two seasons at Georgia. The Alpharetta, Georgia, native played in 96 sets as a sophomore, recording 228 kills, ranked second on the team, with a .254 hitting efficiency in 2025. At the net, she posted 90 total blocks, recording seven matches with five or more blocks. As a freshman, Patten missed all of nonconference play due to an injury but saw the court in 13 matches. That season, she totaled 71 kills and 48 blocks.
Avery Scoggins, a 6-foot setter from New Bern, North Carolina, played two seasons at Arizona before transferring to Vanderbilt. During her freshman campaign, she tallied 1,184 assists and 289 digs, both stats ranking top 5 in Arizona freshman history. Scoggins was named the 2024 AVCA Pacific Region Freshman of the Year and to the All-Big 12 Second Team and Big 12 All-Rookie Team. In 2025, she led the Wildcats with 1,190 assists and ranked second on the team with 314 digs.
Hailing from Austin, Samantha Wunsch is a graduate transfer from Texas State where she garnered AVCA All-Southwest Region honors in 2024 and three All-Sun Belt Conference nods. In 2025, the 6-foot-3 opposite recorded 336 kills while hitting .205, 263 digs and 86 blocks. She led Texas State in kills during back-to-back seasons in 2024 and 2025. She was named the SBC Offensive Player of the Week on four occasions, Texas State Invitational MVP in 2023 and has earned spots on two all-tournament teams.
Fans can follow Vanderbilt volleyball on Facebook, Instagram and X at @VandyVolleyball.
Sports
Booth signs with Italian Serie A1 League
For the second-straight season, the Wisconsin volleyball team will send an athlete overseas to Italy to play in the Serie A1 League, as Booth will join former UW standout Sarah Franklin, who is a member of Savino del Bene Scandicci.
Booth emerged as one of the most dominant middle blockers in the country over the past few seasons, earning First Team All-Big Ten and AVCA Third Team All-American honors in 2025. The graduate posted a career-high 21 kills against No. 1 Kentucky in the NCAA National Semifinals to cap off her time as a Badger—finishing the year with the highest hitting percentage in a single season in school history at .466. Booth placed second in the nation with that mark as well.
The Denver, Colorado, native caught fire down the stretch for UW—guiding the program to their seventh NCAA National Semifinal appearance in school history.
In the NCAA Tournament, Booth recorded an impressive .579 (61 – 6 – 90) swing percentage in five matches to conclude her tenure in Madison—finishing three of those tournament battles with zero attack errors.
The two-time AVCA All-American was a standout on the defensive end, too—shattering the school record for most blocks in a single season back in 2023 with 186. Booth led the team in the category in all three of her seasons in Madison.
Sports
Making The Climb: 2025 Akron Athletics Fall Academic Success
Collectively, Akron student-athletes own a cumulative departmental GPA of 3.27, with more than 69 percent of Zips maintaining an individual cumulative GPA of 3.00 or better at Akron.
The Zips registered 32 Academic All-Mid-American Conference selections across its five MAC-sponsored teams for the 2025 fall campaign.
For the fall semester of 2025, 14 of 16 Akron athletics teams achieved a semester grade point average of 3.00 or higher, led by women’s soccer earning a 3.72 team GPA for the semester. Additionally, swimming and diving (3.675), softball (3.609), rifle (3.59), lacrosse (3.563), women’s cross country (3.518), golf (3.472), baseball (3.30), women’s basketball (3.263), women’s track and field (3.241), men’s soccer (3.184), men’s cross country (3.178), volleyball (3.126) and men’s track and field (3.07) each surpassed the 3.00 team GPA threshold.
The excellence of the Zips in their academic studies was on display as nearly 73 percent of Akron’s student-athletes, 316 of 434, earned an individual GPA for the term of 3.0 or better, while more than 46 percent garnered a GPA of 3.50 or higher.
Fifty-three of the Zips’ student-athletes garnered a perfect 4.0 GPA for the fall semester, including lacrosse (7), women’s soccer (7), men’s soccer (6), swimming and diving (6), softball (5), women’s basketball (4), men’s track and field (4), women’s track and field (4), baseball (2), women’s cross country (2), football (2), rifle (2) and volleyball (2).
Football paced the combined list with 44 Zips earning between a 3.0-3.99 for the fall semester. They were followed by swimming and diving (32), baseball (26), lacrosse (24), women’s track and field (22), women’s soccer (19), softball (16), men’s track and field (16), men’s soccer (14), volleyball (10), men’s basketball (9), rifle (9), women’s basketball (7), golf (7) women’s cross country (5) and men’s cross country (3).
Sixteen Zips earned their degrees from the University of Akron following the fall 2025 semester.
Sports
Hawaii men’s volleyball preview: Setter Tread Rosenthal
Sports
Pride Picked Third in GNAC Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll
WESTON, Mass. — As announced by the Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC), the Regis College men’s volleyball team has been picked third in the conference’s preseason poll, totaling 40 points. Reigning GNAC champions Wentworth Institute of Technology claimed the top spot with 62 points and six first-place votes, while crosstown rival Lasell University earned the remaining two first-place votes to finish second.
The Pride return a strong core of veteran leadership along with a talented group of up-and-coming players.
Brandon Valdes and Jalen Watt return as the team’s top attackers after posting 292 and 218 kills, respectively, last season. Valdes also made his mark from the service line, recording a program-best 48 aces to go along with 148 digs. Senior John Nangle returns as the team’s leading blocker and will look to continue his presence at the net after totaling 79 blocks a season ago. Underclassman Adam Bonica is also back following a standout rookie campaign in which he tallied 209 kills, 120 digs, and 33 blocks.
Regis will add four newcomers to the roster this season, all looking to make an immediate impact.
The Pride are led by fifth-year head coach Josh Anderson, who guided the program to its best regular-season finish in team history last year, placing fourth in the GNAC. Regis hosted and won a home playoff match before advancing to the GNAC semifinals, where it fell to the eventual conference champions.
Regis opens the 2026 season on Friday, January 9, hosting Elms at 7 p.m.
2026 Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll Results
1. Wentworth- 62 (6)
2. Lasell – 58 (2)
3. Regis – 40
4. Emmanuel – 39
5. Rivier – 35
T-6. Emerson – 20
T-6. Elms – 20
8. Dean – 14
Sports
2 Badger volleyball commits just dominated the UA Next game — and look ready now
The Wisconsin Badgers had four recruits in the Under Armour All-American volleyball game. The all-star event showcases the best volleyball recruits in the nation going head-to-head in Orlando. Kelly Sheffield had two outside hitters: Halle Thompson and Audrey Flanagan, one middle blocker: Lynney Tarnow, and one setter: Isabelle Hoppe in the game.
Thompson and Tarnow may have played on the losing team, but they were the two best players on the court, and it really wasn’t even close. Tarnow basically took over the entire first set by herself, recording five kills and two blocks. The announcers were even asking each other, “Have we ever had a middle blocker win the MVP award?”
Tarnow is tall at 6’5″ and plays even taller. She literally had to be game-planned around to help Team Roses ultimately win the match.
Future Wisconsin vball stats from UA Next:
Lynney Tarnow: 9 kills, 1 assist, 4 blocks
Halle Thompson: 13 kills
Audrey Flanagan: 4 kills, 1 assist
Isabelle Hoppe: 1 killunofficial stats via my guy @Lincoln_VB
— Badger of Honor (@BadgerOfHonorFS) January 1, 2026
Lynney Tarnow and Halle Thompson will come in and play as true freshman
Related: Two former Wisconsin volleyball players find new homes through the portal
Tarnow ended the four-set match with nine kills, one assist, and four blocks. She was rotating in and out, as these matches tend to go. Halle Thompson was the best outside hitter by a good margin. As Sheffield would say, “She has a cannon for an arm.” She ended the match with 13 kills, and she missed a few by inches. She was impressive and looks ready to go. Getting kills from all over the court.
The biggest takeaway is that Thompson and Tarnow look like they will be ready to go immediately for the Wisconsin Badgers. Both will be seeing minutes next season. Tarnow will be the second middle blocker, like Alicia Andrew was last season. She will play rotational minutes behind Jaela Auguste, the transfer from the Florida Gators.
Thompson will also find space as a hitter in the Wisconsin offense. She does something that Sheffield always praises: “takes courageous hits.” She will be working with Grace Egan, Madison Quest, Eva Travis, and even Audrey Flanagan.
The other two Wisconsin commits, Flanagan and Hoppe, also looked good and showed a ton of potential. Flanagan was on the winning team and looked good when she was featured, and Hoppe shows a ton of potential, too. They may be more on the scout team or using the year to backup next year, but they both will ultimately be weapons for the Badgers.
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoRoss Brawn to receive Autosport Gold Medal Award at 2026 Autosport Awards, Honouring a Lifetime Shaping Modern F1
-
NIL3 weeks agoNike Signs 10 LSU Athletes to NIL deals
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoStempien to seek opening for Branch County Circuit Court Judge | WTVB | 1590 AM · 95.5 FM
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoPrinceton Area Community Foundation awards more than $1.3 million to 40 local nonprofits ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news %
-
NIL2 weeks agoDowntown Athletic Club of Hawaiʻi gives $300K to Boost the ’Bows NIL fund
-
NIL2 weeks agoKentucky AD explains NIL, JMI partnership and cap rules
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoPRI Show revs through Indy, sets tone for 2026 racing season
-
Sports2 weeks agoYoung People Are Driving a Surge in Triathlon Sign-Ups
-
Sports2 weeks agoThree Clarkson Volleyball Players Named to CSC Academic All-District List
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoTeesside youth discovers more than a sport





