OutKick's Clay Travis says Caitlin Clark is lucky to be getting any salary: “Nobody cares about their profession”

Travis: “That the WNBA exists at all is a testament in many ways to, well, the government”

There has been widespread shock over the minuscule contract of basketball phenom and WNBA top draft pick Caitlin Clark. While right-wing media figures question the appeal and market viability of women's sports, Clark is reportedly finalizing a massive deal with Nike and has even been offered a much more lucrative contract from the Big3 league.

OutKick' Clay Travis says Caitlin Clark is lucky to be getting any salary: "Nobody cares about their profession"

Clay Travis and Buck Sexton
Audio file

Citation

From the April 17, 2024, edition of Premiere Radio Networks' The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

CLAY TRAVIS (CO-HOST): Now, Caitlin Clark drafted number 1 overall, WNBA. Her salary for the next four years went viral — somewhere in the neighborhood of $75,000 a year within the first three years and then a little bit of a step up in year four. I think the total was in the neighborhood of $350K over four years, something in that neighborhood. Now this is important data here. This is from EndWokeness. The revenue produced by the NBA is $10 billion a year. The revenue produced by the WNBA is around 60 million. And if you actually do the math as a percentage of revenue, WNBA players actually make more than NBA players. Just nobody cares about their profession.

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BUCK SEXTON (CO-HOST): Who determines what fair pay is for professional athletes? First of all, the fact that you can make money playing a — it's a kid's game. Right?

TRAVIS: Yes.

SEXTON: I'd say that with, I think that's a good thing. Right? But it's a game meant for, you know, young people and the fact that as an adult, you can make a living playing a sport, which for most people is a form of recreation, is a pretty rarefied and remarkable thing in and of itself. Lot of countries, you know, it's not really a thing you can do. Certainly can't make a living doing it depending on what the sport is. And so I'd want to know what is fair. And you point out the NBA makes, like, a hundred times in revenue what the WNBA makes. So we know what the numbers tell us.

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TRAVIS: Also, I asked this question, and I bet the answer is no. Can you think of any business that has existed for 25 years and never made a profit and still exists? The fact that the WNBA exists at all is a testament in many ways to, well, the government, I guess you could say.

SEXTON: There's the government. There's probably some media publications that have to have, like, you know, rich heiresses.

TRAVIS: But I don't think they're — even some of these media publications, I don't think they could go 25 years with never making a profit. Now maybe you've got an owner who just doesn't care. I mean, basically, you know, there are nonprofits, but I'm talking about an ostensible business venture. The WNBA exists theoretically to make money. It has never made a profit in its entire history.

SEXTON: But I think you stumbled onto something there. I don't think the WNBA exists to make money. Right? I think this is what — I think the Democrats, you know what I'm saying? I think that the truth is —

TRAVIS: But that point would be they're already benefiting. The fact that she makes 75K is a testament to the fact that this organization needs to exist to make Democrats and leftists feel better even though they don't support it themselves.