logo
Why are international players flocking to the WNBA?

Why are international players flocking to the WNBA?

Yahoo06-06-2025
NEW YORK — For a few minutes after a shootaround, Golden State Valkyries coach Natalie Nakase sat on the sideline with French guard Carla Leite beside her. Nakase demonstrated different hand motions and signaled to her 21-year-old rookie guard. Looking to bridge a communication gap as much as possible, Nakase recognized Leite as a strong visual learner.
'Sometimes, it's not easy for me to speak,' Leite said.
Advertisement
More than any other WNBA franchise, the Valkyries roster is a global tapestry. Leite, who said her English is improving every day, is just one part of that. Golden State's opening night roster featured players from six countries.
'I have to learn French is what I've learned,' Nakase said.
French is the Valkyries' unofficial second language. Rookies Janelle Salaün and Leite are natives of France, and guard Julie Vanloo, who is Belgian, speaks French fluently. Vanloo said she is 'available if needed' to translate.
Rookie center Kyara Linskens, another Belgian, downplayed her French proficiency, though when asked by Nakase if she could speak the language, Linskens replied: 'un petit peu.' Translation: a little bit. (Perhaps Linskens is underselling her knowledge.) Some Valkyries assistants are even learning to count in French to connect with players.
Advertisement
While Golden State is the WNBA's newest and most worldly team, it isn't alone in its international presence. The number of foreign-born players in the league has continued to increase. At the start of this season, the league had 34 players born outside the U.S., up from 25 at the beginning of the 2023 season. Among this season's group, 18 were in their first or second WNBA seasons. A new generation of international players is showing newfound interest in the league — and vice versa.
Twelve new roster spots for the addition of Golden State as an expansion franchise were only part of the surge. According to interviews with more than 10 players, executives and coaches, the WNBA's growing global presence, engaged fan bases, increased ownership investment and expected forthcoming salary increases also contribute to its growth.
'You're seeing more and more international players, more Europeans, wanting to come here and play because it's the most competitive league in the world,' said Cecilia Zandalasini, a Valkyries wing and native of Italy.
Advertisement
Since its inception, the WNBA has maintained a global presence, with the number of international players peaking in the early 2000s, when the league had three more teams than it does today. However, as the initial fanfare wore off and the league underwent a turbulent period, the number of foreign players declined.
At the start of the 2011 season, the league had just 15 foreign-born players due to national team commitments, limited financial incentives, role adjustments and a desire to rest during the summer, which became some of the reasons the WNBA wasn't always the top choice for international players. Some of the world's most decorated European players of the last 15 seasons — Alina Iagupova, Alba Torrens and Laia Palau — never played in the WNBA.
Yet, amid a period of transformational growth, international player interest has also increased. The WNBA is broadcast in more than 24 languages this season, up from 16 in 2022, with players tuning in to see packed arenas. (League attendance in 2024 was up 48 percent year-over-year, the highest mark in 22 years.)
'With the (increased) visibility of the league, it does make more sense that more girls would want to aspire to make it to the league,' said Valkyries center Temi Fagbenle, who is American-born but grew up in the United Kingdom.
Advertisement
Exposure takes different forms. Fagbenle loved tennis and didn't watch a WNBA game until she was 14. But soon after seeing her first game, reaching the WNBA became her goal.
Sevgi Uzun, a Turkish guard who began the season with the Phoenix Mercury, turned pro at 16 and started practicing alongside WNBA players who competed in her native country during their offseasons. Although no Turkish women's basketball players were in the WNBA when she grew up, Uzun, as a developing prospect, received consistent encouragement from WNBA players about her potential ceiling.
'Kayla McBride was the very first one who told me you're different, you can do something,' Uzun said. (McBride first played in Turkey in 2017.) Multiple league executives also cited the 2024 Paris Olympics, in which both France and Belgium pushed the American team, as another demonstration of the high-quality international player pool.
In recent years, WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert has discussed the desire to globalize the WNBA. Over the last decade, the league has had only three All-Stars born outside the U.S. (Australian Liz Cambage, Emma Meesseman from Belgium, and Jonquel Jones from The Bahamas). A younger generation of foreign players has taken notice of the league's global brand.
Advertisement
'People are watching it more and are looking forward to being like, 'OK, this can be a goal,' ' said Mercury rookie guard Monique Akoa Makani, who grew up in Cameroon and France. By seeing Belgian guard Julie Allemand (L.A. Sparks) and French guard Marine Johannès (New York Liberty) make a WNBA impact, Akoa Makani found players she could emulate.
'I used to practice with them when they were pro in my local team, and at the time, I was looking up to them,' she said. 'When I saw them going to the W, I was like, 'We're kind of from the same place, why not (me)?' '
Johannès is among a group of international players who face a unique decision this month: continue playing for their WNBA teams or take a brief hiatus to compete in FIBA's EuroBasket tournament, which runs from June 18 to 29.
Johannès sat out the 2024 WNBA season to play for France's Olympic team and will not participate in this month's tournament to remain with the Liberty. However, her New York teammates Nyara Sabally and Leonie Fiebich are competing for Germany. The Liberty's absences pale in comparison to Golden State, as Salaün, Zandalasini, Vanloo and Fagbenle will participate in the event.
Advertisement
Fagbenle, the captain of Team Great Britain, hopes that FIBA and the WNBA will collaborate going forward, so that players aren't forced to choose between country and club teams.
'Two major entities that I would hope would want to work together to figure out a way to make things work for the players who want to play them both,' she said. 'I'm optimistic.'
Earlier this month, FIBA announced it was shifting the 2030 World Cup to late November and early December, while the 2026 World Cup is set to take place in early September, creating a potentially significant scheduling conflict for the WNBA. The WNBA may take a brief hiatus just before the 2026 playoffs, although the scheduling specifics will also need to be collectively bargained with the players' association. The league's players, including top American players, may have to make difficult decisions ahead of the most critical time on the WNBA calendar.
Faced with the decision to stay or leave for this month's EuroBasket, some foreign players have elected to remain with their WNBA teams. Golden State's Linskens and Leite are staying in the U.S. to focus on their first seasons. Seattle Storm forward Gabby Williams will stay to compete in her first full WNBA season since 2022, and Storm rookie Dominique Malonga, the No. 2 pick in April's draft from France, will also continue her WNBA season.
Advertisement
'I think my rookie season is important and I wanted to leave it all with the team,' Malonga said.
Added Leite: 'I think everybody who is born in Europe is also now having the dream to come to the WNBA, so everybody's just super grateful.'
Yet as more international players join the WNBA, an inverse situation is occurring abroad. Over the last 15 years, WNBA greats such as Maya Moore, Diana Taurasi, Candace Parker, Sue Bird, Breanna Stewart and Sylvia Fowles played multiple winter seasons on professional teams in Turkey, China and Russia. However, the era of top Americans playing abroad appears to be fleeting. Unrivaled, the professional 3×3 league that debuted in January, provides players with a high-paying U.S.-based alternative.
The result of American stars not going abroad is already being felt, according to first-year Connecticut Sun coach Rachid Meziane.
Advertisement
'I think overseas domestic leagues are going down a little bit because there are fewer good players because the best players in the world are here,' said Meziane, who is the WNBA's first French-born head coach.
Uzun spent the past season with the Turkish power Fenerbahçe, and she sees a change, too. 'It affects us, especially in EuroLeague,' she said. 'It does affect the quality of the league and the competition. But if you're gonna ask me individually, is (their presence) more important (than) their mental (health) and (spending time with) their families? I'm glad they can choose that now. They have enough power to choose that and make that decision.'
Players from different continents now have more options than ever for professional play. But as it relates to the summer calendar, the pull of the WNBA appears stronger than ever before.
'Perception has changed,' said Zandalasini, who returned to the WNBA last year after a five-year hiatus. 'The WNBA is growing so fast, and there are fans definitely coming to every game everywhere, so it's more appealing as a league.'
Advertisement
— The Athletic
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
Minnesota Lynx, New York Liberty, Seattle Storm, Los Angeles Sparks, Washington Mystics, Atlanta Dream, Chicago Sky, Connecticut Sun, Indiana Fever, Dallas Wings, Las Vegas Aces, Phoenix Mercury, Golden State Valkyries, WNBA, Sports Business
2025 The Athletic Media Company
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dallas Wings trade guard DiJonai Carrington to Minnesota Lynx, waive center Teaira McCowan
Dallas Wings trade guard DiJonai Carrington to Minnesota Lynx, waive center Teaira McCowan

CBS News

time5 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Dallas Wings trade guard DiJonai Carrington to Minnesota Lynx, waive center Teaira McCowan

The Dallas Wings have traded guard DiJonai Carrington to the Minnesota Lynx and have waived center Teaira McCowan, the organization announced early Sunday morning. In exchange for Carrington, the Wing will receive Lynx guard Diamond Miller, Lynx guard Karlie Samuelson and Minnesota's 2027 second-round pick. The news comes before the WNBA's Aug. 7 deadline. Carrington, 27, a 2024 All-Star and the league's 2024 Most Improved Player, was brought to the Wings from the Connecticut Sun earlier this year in one of the largest trades in the history of the WNBA. She is now the second player from that deal to be traded to another team, as forward NaLyssa Smith was sent to the Las Vegas Aces in June in exchange for a first-round pick in the 2027 WNBA Draft. Both trades are a shock for fans, who were hoping this new Wings squad, with the addition of rookie Paige Bueckers, could be a contender for a championship. Carrington, who was a starter for the Wings when the season began, has been coming off the bench as of late. She's appeared in 20 games this season, starting 13 of them and averaging 10.4 points, 5.1 rebounds, 1.8 assists and 1.1 steals. The Wings acquired McCowan in 2022 from the Indiana Fever. She averaged double-figures and at least seven rebounds per game in six of her first seven seasons in the WNBA. The 6-7 center from Mississippi State has appeared in 17 games in 2025, averaging 5.6 points and 4.6 rebounds. Like Carrington, McCowan was a former starter for Dallas, but was coming off the bench for most of the 2025 season. Will a team pick her up before the Aug. 7 deadline? Time will tell over the next few days.

Person arrested for throwing sex toy onto WNBA court, league says
Person arrested for throwing sex toy onto WNBA court, league says

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Person arrested for throwing sex toy onto WNBA court, league says

A person has been arrested for throwing a sex toy onto the court of a WNBA game between the Golden State Valkyries and Atlanta Dream earlier this week, the league announced Saturday via the San Francisco Chronicle's Marisa Ingemi. The incident was the first of two to hit the WNBA this week, with a second green toy landing at the court of another Valkyries road game against the Chicago Sky on Friday. Per the Chronicle, that toy was thrown by a person different from the one in Atlanta. In addition to criminal charges, the WNBA promised immediate ejection and a minimum one-year ban for anyone who throws an object onto the court. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] The league's statement, via the Chronicle: 'Any fan who intentionally throws an object onto the court will be immediately ejected and face a minimum one-year ban in addition to being subject to arrest and prosecution by local authorities,' the league wrote. 'The safety and well-being of everyone in our arenas is a top priority for our league. Objects of any kind thrown onto the court or in the seating area can pose a safety risk for players, game officials, and fans. … The subject involved in the incident in Atlanta on Tuesday has been arrested.' Security officials were reportedly spotted questioning fans at the 200 level of the Sky's Wintrust Arena on Friday, so the league or authorities could be in the process of identifying that fan as well. Video of both incidents have gone viral on social media, with even some WNBA players joking about the ridiculous situation. Others, however, have denounced the action as dangerous and demeaning, including Sky center Elizabeth Williams, per the Chicago Tribune: 'It's super disrespectful,' Sky center Elizabeth Williams said after the Valkyries' 73-66 victory. 'I don't really get the point of it. It's really immature. Whoever is doing it needs to grow up.' And Valkyries forward Cecilia Zandalasini, per the Associated Press: "I mean, first of all, it was super dangerous," Valkyries forward Cecilia Zandalasini said after Tuesday's game. "And then when we found out what it was, I guess we just started laughing. I've never seen anything like that. I'm just glad we worked through that situation. We stayed locked in. We stayed concentrated." Others have spoken out on social media: Sex toys being thrown onto the field of play isn't completely unprecedented, but the circumstances were vastly different in the most notable example, where the Buffalo Bills fans have thrown them in games against the New England Patriots.

WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process
WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process

With red welts scattered like landmarks of the war she'd just waged, Kelsey Plum let the microphone have it. 'I drive more than anyone in the league,' the Sparks guard said, voice taut. 'So to shoot six free throws is f— absurd. And I got scratches on my face, I got scratches on my body, and these guards on the other teams get these ticky-tack fouls, and I'm sick of it.' Plum played 41 minutes during an overtime loss to the Golden State Valkyries, during which she was awarded those six free throws. She is one of many WNBA players, coaches and fans who have vented frustration over what they see as inconsistent and unreliable officiating this season. Yet, within the walls of the league's officiating office, there is steadfast belief that referees are doing their jobs well. 'Overall, I'm very pleased with the work this year,' said Monty McCutchen, the head of referee training and development for all NBA leagues. But McCutchen and Sue Blauch, who oversees WNBA referee performance and development, aren't blind to the backlash — acknowledging 'some high-profile misses that we need to own on our end.' To do so, they pointed to an officiating analysis program through which 95% of games are watched live, with every play graded by internal and independent reviewers. Those evaluations are used to chart each referee's performance over time. Teams can flag up to 30 plays for review per game through a league portal — including isolated calls or themes spanning multiple games. League officials respond with rulings on each clip and compile curated playlists by call type, delivering them directly to the referees. Read more: Kelsey Plum voices frustration over lack of calls in Sparks' loss to Valkyries 'There's no shortage of feedback,' McCutchen said. But the WNBA's structural backbone of officiating differs from the NBA in significant ways. With just 35 referees, all of whom moonlight calling NCAA or G League games, the WNBA relies on part-timers earning $1,538 per game as rookies, with each official calling 20 to 34 contests per season. 'You're working three very different kinds of basketball,' said Jacob Tingle, director of sport management at Trinity University who has conducted research on officiating networks and pathways. 'The reason the NBA or MLB works is because that's all you do — you're working the same kind of game only.' The WNBA lacks a centralized replay center, a developmental league to groom talent and shuffles crew combinations from game to game — a patchwork system that can strain referees expected to deliver consistency. 'When you don't have group cohesion, you don't have the same level of trust in your partners,' said David Hancock, a professor who studies the psychology of sports officiating. 'We've done one study — when referees felt more connected to their group, they also felt they performed better.' McCutchen said teams get a verdict on the calls they send for review. But beyond that, there's no insight into grading or transparency about patterns the league has researched. So when it seems a whistle has been swallowed during a game, players and coaches are left searching for consistency. 'You don't know in the WNBA anymore,' said Joshua Jackson, a Louisiana State University professor who studies media and athlete perception. 'I can't tell when I'm watching a game exactly what this foul call is going to be. I'll hear the whistle and think, 'OK, maybe it's a reach-in and then suddenly it's a view for a flagrant one instead? Wait, how did we get here?'' The whistle has become one of the WNBA's biggest wild cards. Angel Reese called it 'diabolical.' Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said after a fourth-quarter letdown led to a loss that the game was 'stolen from us.' Belgian guard Julie Allemand told The Times she felt more 'protected' playing in EuroBasket. And Napheesa Collier, one of the stars of the 2025 season, warned 'it's getting worse.' Read more: WNBA players embrace continuously growing tunnel walk fashion The whistle, or lack thereof, might echo louder in 2026, when the WNBA begins a $2.2-billion, 11-year media rights deal with Disney, Amazon and NBCUniversal — each of whom will air more than 125 games a year across TV and streaming networks. Nicole LaVoi, who helms the Tucker Center — a research hub focused on advocating for girls and women in sports — said the narrative surrounding female athletes forces them to walk a tightrope: speak up and risk being dismissed as an emotional woman or stay quiet and let the league's image unravel. 'This is a broader, contextual, systemic issue,' LaVoi said. 'It's not just about bad refs making bad calls. This is a much larger problem within a system where women's sport has been undervalued and underappreciated for decades.' Many players have ignored concerns about the perception they whine too much about officiating, arguing the inconsistency in calls is dangerous. Lucas Seehafer, a professor and kinesiologist at Medical University of South Carolina who tracks WNBA injuries, said players have suffered 173 injuries this season and missed 789 games, entering Saturday's games. Injuries are undoubtedly multifactorial, Seehafer said. Still, inconsistent whistles can leave players unsure of how much contact to expect — forcing them into unfamiliar movements or hesitation. And that can lend itself to awkward landings, a key contributor in lower-extremity injuries. 'The athletes strive on consistency and mechanical efficiency,' said Nirav Pandya, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist at UC San Francisco. 'When you don't know how much contact's going to be allowed, it does throw off that rhythm, which increases your injury risk.' When Caitlin Clark suffered a groin injury in mid-July, her brother — in a now-deleted X post — blamed the officials for letting too much contact slide. 'People go watch the WNBA because of the talent,' LaVoi said, 'and when the talent is sitting on the bench, that's not very exciting to fans.' Read more: WNBA motherhood: The balancing act between career and kids While critics are quick to call out officiating, referees are navigating a structure stretched thin. Brenda Hilton, founder of Officially Human — an organization dedicated to improving the treatment of sports officials — said 70%-80% of officials quit within their first three years, largely due to online abuse. 'The people that are doing the work are people, they are fallible,' LaVoi said. 'The players are fallible as well, so are the coaches. So can we get back some compassion for the humanity of the people doing it, and appreciate the fact that they love what they do? They're not doing it because they're getting huge NIL deals and branding opportunities.' NBA and WNBA officiating leaders have not announced any plans for changes to their system, so the stress will probably continue among players, coaches, fans and those who control the whistles. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store