Current:Home > StocksWNBA to begin full-time charter flights this season, commissioner says -MoneyMatrix
WNBA to begin full-time charter flights this season, commissioner says
View
Date:2025-04-13 15:29:39
NEW YORK (AP) — The wait for full-time charter flights for WNBA teams finally is over with commissioner Cathy Engelbert announcing the league’s plans to start the program this season.
“We intend to fund a full-time charter for this season,” Engelbert said Tuesday in a meeting with sports editors.
She said the league will launch the program “as soon as we can get planes in places.”
Engelbert said the program will cost the league around $25 million per year for the next two seasons.
The WNBA already had announced at its draft last month plans to once again pay for charter flights for the entire playoffs as well as for back-to-back games during the upcoming season that require air travel.
The league’s schedule features more back-to-back sets this season with the WNBA taking a long break for the Olympics in late July and early August. The league spent $4 million on charters in 2023.
Engelbert said before the WNBA draft that the league needs to be in the right financial position to charter planes.
The WNBA is attracting more attention than ever thanks to rookies like Caitlin Clark, who helped the NCAA reach its best viewership in history for women’s basketball, with nearly 19 million fans watching the title game, along with Angel Reese who went to the Met Gala on Monday night and Cameron Brink.
Clark attracted attention walking through the airport with her new Indiana Fever teammates for a preseason game with the Dallas Wings last week. That exhibition sold out with fans lined up eager to get inside.
WNBA teams also have been moving games against Clark and Indiana to bigger arenas due to increased demand.
Flights have been an issue for the WNBA that only increased last year with the league working with Brittney Griner and the Phoenix Mercury. They had to go commercial air, and the All-Star center who had been detained in Russia for nearly 10 months was harassed by what the WNBA called a “provocateur.”
The league hadn’t allowed teams to use charter flights except for when they have back-to-back games.
Many teams had been using public charter airline JSX. Those flights were allowed by the WNBA with certain protocols in place, including that teams fly on the 30-seat planes using preset routes and times.
___
AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball
veryGood! (96327)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- The New Season: Art from hip hop to Picasso
- How Bethann Hardison changed the face of fashion - and why that matters
- Connecticut lawmakers OK election monitor for Bridgeport after mayor race tainted by possible fraud
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- India, at UN, is mum about dispute with Canada over Sikh separatist leader’s killing
- 8 people electrocuted as floods cause deaths and damage across South Africa’s Western Cape
- Mississippi announced incentives for company days after executive gave campaign money to governor
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Absentee ballots are late in 1 Mississippi county after a candidate is replaced because of illness
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- 5 numbers to watch for MLB's final week: Milestones, ugly history on the horizon
- Multiple striking auto workers struck by car outside plant
- Mississippi announced incentives for company days after executive gave campaign money to governor
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Alabama inmate Kenneth Smith poised to be test subject for new execution method, his lawyers say
- Messi Mania has grabbed hold in Major League Soccer, but will it be a long-lasting boost?
- Man jailed while awaiting trial for fatal Apple store crash because monitoring bracelet not charged
Recommendation
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Lady A singer Charles Kelley celebrates 1 year sober: 'Finding out who I really am'
Jason Ritter Shares How Amazing Wife Melanie Lynskey Helped Him Through Sobriety Journey
Even the meaning of the word 'abortion' is up for debate
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Herschel Walker’s wife is selling the Atlanta house listed as Republican’s residence in Senate run
'I'm going to pay you back': 3 teens dead in barrage of gunfire; 3 classmates face charges
A police officer who was critically wounded by gunfire has been released from the hospital