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What can Caitlin Clark make as a WNBA rookie?

Caitlin Clark ended the debate of whether she would declare for the WNBA Draft when she announced Thursday she will forgo a potential fifth year at Iowa and turn professional following her senior season.

A question that remains is what Clark’s decision means for her financially. In the new college basketball landscape, where athletes are allowed to profit off their name, image and likeness, Clark doesn’t have to go pro to make money. She isn’t part of Iowa’s collective, so she’s not taking money from the school’s boosters. But she’s already earning off her endorsements with major brands, and she’ll have additional opportunities to capitalize once she becomes a professional.

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Caitlin Clark declares for 2024 WNBA Draft

What will Clark’s salary be as a rookie?​

The base salary for a rookie selected in the lottery — spoiler, that’s where Clark will be picked as the No. 1 selection — is $78,006 in her first season. On top of that, the Rookie of the Year award winner receives a bonus of $5,150, All-Stars make $2,575, and there are additional incentives for the 3-point contest champion and playoff participants, all of which are possibilities for Clark in her first year.

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If Clark, 22, decides to play overseas, that contract would become another source of income. The Athletic reported during the 2022-23 offseason that a handful of players made upwards of half a million dollars internationally during that time. With China reopening its leagues to American players this offseason, that increases the amount of high-value contracts available.




Are there other opportunities for compensation?​

It’s likely that a player with her national profile (similar to her presumed future Indiana Fever teammate Aliyah Boston) would choose to stay stateside, especially after playing 12 months consecutively by the end of her rookie year. In that event, Clark also will be able to enter marketing agreements in the WNBA, both with her team and the league as a whole. Individual franchises have up to $100,000 at their disposal for players who represent the team locally during the offseason, and the league spends at least $1 million on marketing deals annually, though players are capped at $250,000 each.

Teams also can provide players time-off bonuses of up to $50,000 to limit the amount of time they spend playing overseas.

What happens to Clark’s NIL deals?​

Clark already has partnerships with national brands including State Farm, Nike and Gatorade. Those deals will follow her to the WNBA. It’s worth noting that Nike is one of the league’s Changemakers, and State Farm sponsors the WNBA Draft.

As the CEO of Iowa’s primary NIL collective told The Wall Street Journal, Clark doesn’t take money from the school’s boosters. She may have local endorsements who are only interested in Iowa athletes, but she’ll likely compensate for those with companies in Indiana who want to be in the Caitlin Clark business once she plays for the Fever. The geographic proximity of her new team likely works in her favor. For example, one of Clark’s first partnerships has been with Hy-Vee — she has her own cereal called Crunch Time; but the Midwest-based grocery chain is set to expand to Indiana, keeping Clark in its zone.

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Recent WNBA draftees, including 2023 rookie Haley Jones, have spoken about retaining their collegiate endorsements once they entered the league. Jones said that she’s added to her portfolio since joining the Atlanta Dream.

Why did Clark choose to go pro?​

Clark has already set the NCAA Division I and major conference women’s scoring records, and she is within striking distance of passing former LSU great Pete Maravich’s total that set the scoring record in men’s college basketball. She is a three-time All-American, the reigning national player of the year, and has led the country in points and assists in the same season, which she is on pace to do yet again. Clark doesn’t have anything left to learn by playing in college another season. She is ready to challenge herself against pros.

There are obvious benefits to staying in college for one more year, but whether she wins a national title for Iowa or not, Clark is the best player in the school’s history and has taken the program to incredible heights. Her legacy as a collegian is secure. It’s time to move on.

Indianapolis columnist apologizes to Caitlin Clark over 'awkward' heart gesture

Indianapolis Star sports columnist Gregg Doyel said "I was part of the problem" following the interaction with the Indiana Fever player.

An Indianapolis sports columnist has apologized for flashing a heart symbol with his hands, as well as for his subsequent comments, to new Indiana Fever player and college basketball star Caitlin Clark in what soon became an “awkward” interaction.

Indianapolis Star columnist Gregg Doyel at Clark’s introductory press conference with the WNBA team made the heart symbol while speaking to her, to which Clark responded, “You like that?” Doyel replied, “I like that you’re here.”


Clark, who broke the NCAA scoring record for both women and men while an Iowa Hawkeye, and was the No. 1 pick at Monday’s WNBA draft, said, “I do that at my family after every game, so, it’s pretty cool.”

“OK, well, start doing it to me and we’ll get along just fine,” Doyel replied, before asking a question about Clark’s decision to turn pro and enter the draft.

Doyel, in a column published online Wednesday night, apologized.

“I’m devastated to realize I’m part of the problem,” he wrote.

Doyel said that he is known for having awkward conversations with people before asking “brashly conversational questions.” He’d done so for years with Indianapolis Colts coaches, as well as with Purdue University and Indiana University players, Doyel wrote.

He called himself “another insensitive man,” and said he offended Clark and her family while trying to be “clever” and “welcoming.”

“After going through denial, and then anger — I’m on the wrong side of this? Me??? — I now realize what I said and how I said it was wrong, wrong, wrong. I mean it was just wrong,” Doyel wrote. “Caitlin Clark, I’m so sorry.”

NBC News could not immediately reach Clark or her representatives for comment late Wednesday night.

Clark, 22, last season at the University of Iowa broke the women’s NCAA all-time scoring record in February, and then broke the men’s record a month later. She ended with 3,951 career points.

With Clark playing, the women’s NCAA championship game between the Hawkeyes and the South Carolina Gamecocks drew more viewers than the men’s championship game for the first time.

Iowa lost to South Carolina for the title, but Clark was singled out by Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley for lifting up women’s basketball.

Clark has since made multiple high-profile media appearances, including on “TODAY” and “Saturday Night Live.” In another sign of fans’ excitement for her, Clark’s Indiana Fever jersey became the top-selling jersey ever for a draft pick.





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Cryptocurrency or Artificial Intelligence - If You Could Only Have One...

If we can have only one, which one should we keep?

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According to Science Friday, AI and Crypto both consume incredible amounts of energy and (I didn't know this) fresh water.

If we decided to clamp down on one of them to save that energy and water (and bring down the cost of graphics cards, of course), which one would you choose to keep?

US economy is more ‘wobbly’ than it seems and Biden’s ‘lie’ isn’t helping

Two experts expressed concerns about the stability of the US economy, despite signs of growth.

Steve Forbes noted that gold and commodity prices suggested dollar weakness, and that raising interest rates could depress the economy.

Kevin Hassett pointed out that strong retail sales in March were partly due to higher gas prices, meaning consumers had less to spend elsewhere, and called the economy “more wobbly” than the data suggests.

“The Fed’s got problems ahead,” he added, “and you don’t cure it by raising interest rates and depressing the economy.”

Both attributed high inflation to Biden administration policies, arguing it acts as a greater tax on low-income Americans who are paying higher prices and interest.

They claimed the White House lacked commitment to the economy and accused officials of lying about inflation for political goals rather than addressing its economic impacts.

“One of the reasons why retail sales were so strong is that there were really blockbuster sales at gas stations,” said Hassett, ex-Council of Economic Advisors Chair and Trump administration senior advisor. “The AAA average price in the U.S. went from $3.30 last month to $3.60 this month, and that’s money that people aren’t going to have to spend on other things. And so I think that the economy is more wobbly than these data suggests.”

“Inflation is a tax. And who gets hurt the most? We know who they are: tens of millions of people living paycheck to paycheck and up to their eyeballs in credit card debt, interest rates going up. We’ve discussed here before, what’s the real rate of inflation? It’s not 3%, it’s 7% when you cut interest payments, you have to pay that interest every month,” Forbes said.

“So Joe Biden’s taxing the people who have the least. Yet he’s babbling on about getting to the rich,” the CEO added. “All this… is not about revenue. This is about control. It’s not about growth, it’s about controlling people’s lives.”


“Your job is to help run the economy and have smart policies. And if you want more progressive taxation, then you could talk about how to do that without harming the economy, but to just lie about it the way they do over and over, it really is infuriating,” Hassett said.

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'Very scary prospect': Spike in illegal immigrants from this US adversary blows lid off previous year's record

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It's the University president and AD's job to secure NIL funding. Schools successful with NIL, begin with the president and AD!

If they fail, the sports programs will fail because the best teams in football and basketball are aggressive and successful in the portal. There are some very wealthy alumni from UI. The pres and AD must cultivate those relationships and explain the role of NIL. Then have them get their friggin' check books out!
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