WNBA and players' union meet on CBA for 6th straight day with revenue sharing, housing key hurdles

NEW YORK (AP) — The WNBA and its players' union are meeting for a sixth straight day on Sunday in hopes of getting a collective bargaining agreement finished in a timely fashion to avoid any potential delays to the upcoming season.

Associated Press

It's been a marathon week of discussions with the two sides getting together for more than 60 hours since the first in-person bargaining session on Tuesday.

Sunday's session began around noon EDT with Nneka Ogwumike, Breanna Stewart, Napheesa Collier and Alysha Clark back in attendance on the union's side. Brianna Turner arrived a few hours later.

Revenue sharing and housing are still key sticking points.

"It's very important for us to nail those two things down, which is I think the biggest thing on the agenda today," Ogwumike, the union's president, said Saturday between bargaining sessions. "So we want to make sure that we can get that."

League proposals have involved net revenue — revenue after expenses — and union ones have talked about gross revenue — revenue before expenses.

When negotiations first started more than a year ago, the union was asking for 40% of gross revenue and had come down to 26% before the marathon in-person bargaining session Tuesday. The league had been offering more than 70% net revenue for the players.

"We've talked a lot about revenue share, which that's obviously going to be, I don't even really like calling it the elephant in the room. Like it's there, you know, like we're going to talk about it," Ogwumike said. "But housing is big, you know, and housing is really big. And I think that perhaps people understanding this negotiation or learning about it has really shown how meaningful something like a housing benefit is, especially for the women in the W."

Teams have paid for player housing in the WNBA since the beginning and the league wanted to amend that in the new CBA.

"We're trying to enter into this transitional space where we are now making enough money toward to be able to take care of that, but we're not quite at the point where we can eliminate it outright," Ogwumike said.

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Prior to the start of negotiations Tuesday night, the union had been asking for teams to continue paying for housing for players in the first few years of the new agreement, but in the last two years of the CBA the franchises would no longer have to pay for housing for players that are making near the maximum salary, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the negotiations.

In the same time period, the league proposed that they would continue paying all players housing for the upcoming season and then change to only paying for rookies housing as well as players making the minimum salary, the person said.

The league also would pay for housing of the two developmental players being added to teams for the entire length of the CBA.

If these two major items can get figured out, the season most likely would be able to start on time on May 8. WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said Friday night that they need to get a deal done by Monday to potentially avoid disruptions to the upcoming season.

"Can things be 24 to 48 hours later than maybe a date that we put on a piece of paper just to get everybody understanding there is a basketball calendar here? Can things be 24 to 48 hours (later)? Sure," Engelbert said. "But not much more before you start to look at, you know, can we open training camp up, you know, that kind of stuff."

The league's first two preseason games are on April 25 with Caitlin Clark and Indiana visiting New York and Seattle playing Golden State.

"We have a fairly short preseason," Engelbert said. "We have preseason games scheduled on April 25. That's what I first worry about. Those are some great games."

Before the preseason games even happen, there's a lot to do with an expansion draft for Portland and Toronto as well as free agency for 80% of the league. The college draft also needs to take place.

AP WNBA:https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

WNBA and players' union meet on CBA for 6th straight day with revenue sharing, housing key hurdles

NEW YORK (AP) — The WNBA and its players' union are meeting for a sixth straight day on Sunday in hopes of getting a ...
Gilgeous-Alexander keeps record 20-point streak alive as Thunder win 8th straight, beat Timberwolves

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 20 points and 10 assists, and the Oklahoma City Thunder defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves 116-103 on Sunday for their eighth straight win.

Associated Press Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, right, pushes past Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips) Oklahoma City Thunder Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, left, pushes past Minnesota Timberwolves guard Ayo Dosunmu, right, during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips) Oklahoma City Thunder forward Jaylin Williams, bottom, keeps the ball away from Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle, top, during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips) Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle, right, pushes past Oklahoma City Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein, left, during the second half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips) Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards, right, looks for an opening past Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren, left, and guard Ajay Mitchell, center, during the second half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips)

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Gilgeous-Alexander barely extended his record streak of games with at least 20 points to 128. He had just 10 points heading into the fourth, and he re-entered the game with 7:10 left after resting.

He scored on a stepback against Anthony Edwards with 1:46 remaining and was fouled to reach 19 points. With the crowd standing and chanting "M-V-P!" he drained the free throw to keep the streak alive and push himself further pastWilt Chamberlain's old mark of 126.

Chet Holmgren had 21 points and nine rebounds and Isaiah Joe added 20 points for the Thunder, who improved to a league-best 53-15.

Julius Randle scored 32 points and Edwards added 19 for the Timberwolves.

The Thunder forced 22 turnovers while committing just seven. Oklahoma City attempted 101 shots while Minnesota tried 77.

Oklahoma City ran out to a 9-0 lead and held the Timberwolves scoreless for nearly three minutes at the start.

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Minnesota recovered and led 53-47 at halftime. Gilgeous-Alexander scored just four points on 2-for-10 shooting before the break.

Minnesota pushed its lead to 68-59 midway through the third quarter before the Thunder rallied. A 3-pointer by Jaylin Williams that bounced before going in gave Oklahoma City a 78-73 edge, and the Thunder took an 80-76 lead into the fourth.

Oklahoma City took control early in the final period. Jared McCain caught ano-look, behind-the-back pass from Isaiah Hartensteinand drained a 3-pointer to give Oklahoma City a 91-80 lead. The two connected again, this time withHartenstein's two-handed pass bouncing between his legs and behind him. McCain's 3 put the Thunder ahead 94-81.

Up next

Timberwolves: Host Phoenix on Tuesday.

Thunder: Visit Orlando on Tuesday.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Gilgeous-Alexander keeps record 20-point streak alive as Thunder win 8th straight, beat Timberwolves

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 20 points and 10 assists, and the Oklahoma City Thunder defeated the Min...
Miami (Ohio) not last team in NCAA field, but treated like it with First Four trip

According to NCAA Tournament committee chair Keith Gill, Miami (Ohio) was not on the edge of being excluded from the 2026 NCAA Tournament field.

Field Level Media

Gill, the Sun Belt Conference commissioner, asserted that the RedHawks received the 34th of 37 at-large invites into the 68-team field.

But when it came time for the committee to create the matchups, the RedHawks might as well have been the last team in. Miami received a No. 11 seed in the Midwest Region, but the squad that went 31-0 during the regular season must face fellow No. 11 Midwest seed SMU in the First Four in Dayton, Ohio, just to advance to the final 64.

"Miami came into the field before NC State, Texas and SMU," Gill said on ESPN Sunday night. "So they came in before those schools. And when we put them on the seed line and we scrubbed them against those schools, they ended up falling, so they ended up being kind of the last at-large on our seed list - but they weren't the last at-large selected into the field."

Why did the committee treat Miami (31-1) like No. 34 in the selection process, but No. 37 in the seeding process? Gill declared that the committee followed its principles.

"One of the things that's really important is, we look at the resume metrics and what you've accomplished as a way to kind of figure out who gets into the field," Gill said. "And when you look at Miami's resume metrics first, they have a historic 28-0 regular season against Division I competition. They have a WAB (Wins Above Bubble) that is 37th (in the nation). They have a Strength of Record (ranking) that's 28. So they have some really strong kind of resume metrics that show their accomplishments.

"And then they're obviously a quality team in terms of their offensive kind of work in terms of being second in scoring offense in the nation and also being first in field goal percentage. And so when we look at those things and we put those together, we felt like Miami was certainly one of the 37 best at-large teams.

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"I think what happens when we do our scrubbing process, we're looking a little bit more at the predictive metrics. Their predictive metrics aren't quite as good - and that's why they ended up falling against some of those teams on the seed line."

The Mid-American Conference regular-season champions won 31 consecutive games to start the season before an upset loss in the conference tournament quarterfinals on Thursday. Akron became the three-time defending champions by claiming the MAC title, which cast doubt on whether the NCAA Tournament selection committee would grant the MAC two bids for the first time since 1999.

In the end, VCU wound up being the team that should have felt the most pressure on Sunday. Though the Rams appeared to be a legitimate at-large candidate with a WAB ranking of 40 and a Strength of Record that stood 39th in the nation, they apparently would have fallen short if they had not defeated Dayton in Sunday's A-10 final.

"With regards to VCU," Gill told CBS during the Selection Sunday show, "(the Rams) would not have been in the field if they had not won the Atlantic 10 automatic qualifier."

The RedHawks made the field with a NET rating of 64 over Oklahoma (38) and Auburn (44). Auburn had wins over Florida, St. John's and Arkansas - all teams that received a five seed or better - but wasn't one of the 10 SEC teams awarded a bid.

Gill elaborated about the process with ESPN without delving into many specifics.

"I think a lot of times when it comes down to that last team in the field - and, so, this year that was SMU - and so that conversation between them and some of those teams that are outside the tournament is really challenging," Gill said. "All those teams had good years and some really good things on their resumes. They also had some things that were probably not as good, so when you're trying to compare those and get to that last team in the tournament, it is tense and you're just trying to make sure you're making the best decision."

-Field Level Media

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Iran war an 'abject lesson' on fossil fuel dependence, UN climate chief says

By Kate Abnett

Reuters

BRUSSELS, March 16 (Reuters) - The disruption to energy markets caused by the Iran war is an "abject lesson" in the risks of relying ‌on fossil fuels, and underscores the case for governments to wean their ‌economies off oil and gas, the U.N. climate secretary will tell EU policymakers on Monday.

While geographically far ​from the crisis in the Middle East, the European Union has felt its disruption through surging global energy prices. European gas prices have jumped by 50% during the two-week war.

"Fossil fuel dependency is ripping away national security and sovereignty, and replacing it with ‌subservience and rising costs," Simon ⁠Stiell, Executive Secretary of the U.N. climate change arm UNFCCC, will tell EU officials and government ministers at an event in ⁠Brussels.

"Europe is more reliant on fossil fuel imports than almost any other major economy," Stiell will say, in prepared remarks that warned reliance on fossil fuels was leaving consumers "at the ​mercy ​of geopolitical shocks and price volatility".

The EU imports ​more than 90% of its ‌oil and 80% of its gas.

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EU leaders are hurriedly drafting emergency measures to shield consumers from the energy price spike, and avoid a repeat of Europe's 2022 energy crisis, when Russia slashed gas deliveries, sending prices to record highs.

In the longer term, the European Commission says its climate change strategy to replace fossil fuels with locally-produced ‌renewable and nuclear energy will secure countries' energy ​security, and cut them free from volatile fuel ​prices.

But governments including Italy and Hungary ​are urging Brussels to weaken its climate change policies, to ‌provide short-term cost relief for industries.

Stiell will ​warn doing this would ​be "completely delusional" and argue the shift to renewable sources like wind and solar power means cheaper energy, jobs in clean-technology industries, and secure supplies.

"Meek dependence ​on fossil fuel imports ‌will leave Europe forever lurching from crisis to crisis," Stiell will say.

"Renewables ​turn the tables. Sunlight doesn't depend on narrow and vulnerable shipping straits."

(Reporting ​by Kate Abnett; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

Iran war an 'abject lesson' on fossil fuel dependence, UN climate chief says

By Kate Abnett BRUSSELS, March 16 (Reuters) - The disruption to energy markets caused by the Iran war is an ...
Afghan asylum-seeker dies in ICE custody, US advocacy group says

By Joey Roulette

Reuters

March 15 (Reuters) - An Afghan immigrant who previously worked with the U.S. military in Afghanistan and later sought asylum in the United States died this weekend in Immigration and Customs ‌Enforcement custody less than 24 hours after being detained in Texas, a U.S. veteran-led advocacy group said ‌on Sunday.

Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal, who was living in a Dallas suburb with his wife and six children while his asylum case remained pending, ​was arrested by federal agents outside his apartment on Friday morning while taking his children to school, AfghanEvac president Shawn VanDiver said in a statement.

Paktyawal died of unknown causes on Saturday, VanDiver said.

Paktyawal, 41, is at least the 12th person to die in ICE detention this year under U.S. President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Last year, 31 people died after being ‌detained by ICE, a two-decade high. ⁠ICE has played a central role in Trump's policy of mass deportations.

In a statement on Sunday, ICE said Paktyawal was eating breakfast when medical staff noted that his tongue had ⁠become swollen, prompting a medical response. He was declared dead only after multiple attempts at resuscitation, the agency said.

The agency said it "is committed to ensuring that all those in custody reside in safe, secure, and humane environments."

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According to VanDiver, Paktyawal's family was ​told ​that he was taken to a hospital in Dallas on ​the night of his arrest and was still ‌alive the following morning, but died shortly after.

AfghanEvac called for an immediate investigation.

"It is highly unusual for an otherwise healthy 41-year-old man to die less than a day after being taken into government custody," VanDiver said.

Paktyawal, a former Afghan special forces soldier who had worked alongside U.S. Army Special Forces since 2005, was evacuated from Afghanistan with his family in 2021 when the United States withdrew its forces after a war lasting two decades, VanDiver said.

Paktyawal had worked in ‌the Dallas area at an Afghan halal market and was the ​primary provider for his family, including an 18-month-old infant, VanDiver said. ​He had been living in Richardson, Texas, VanDiver ​said.

The number of people detained by ICE has risen to record levels during Trump's immigration ‌crackdown. ICE had some 68,000 people in custody as ​of early February.

More than 70,000 ​Afghans entered the United States under Democratic former President Joe Biden's Operation Allies Welcome initiative following the Taliban takeover of Kabul in 2021, according to the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. agencies under Trump ​have moved to terminate temporary protected status ‌previously granted by the U.S. government for humanitarian reasons to some 14,600 Afghans, opening them up ​to deportation.

(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington, additional reporting by Ryan Jones in Toronto and Ted ​Hesson in Washginton; Editing by Sergio Non and Will Dunham)

Afghan asylum-seeker dies in ICE custody, US advocacy group says

By Joey Roulette March 15 (Reuters) - An Afghan immigrant who previously worked with the U.S. military in Afgh...

 

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