Brittney Griner Should Never Have Been in Vladamir Putin’s Russia

The WNBA star's predicament highlights the tragedy of the U.S. gender-wage gap

Updated March 8, 2022 at 10:03 a.m.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Today is international Womenโ€™s Day, and Brittney Griner, one of the top female athletes on earth, sits in a Russian jail cell, her fate subject to international diplomacy and the justice system in a country run by a murderous dictator. She shouldโ€™ve never been there.Russia dropped over the weekend that it has had Griner locked upโ€“possibly since sometime last monthโ€“on charges that she had a vape pen with hashish oil in her luggage. She could face a decade or longer in a Russian prison. There are obvious reasons, broken down in this thread from former ESPN anchor Adrienne Lawrence, to distrust Russiaโ€™s explanation that it just happened upon a stash in the carry-on of a 6-foot-7 Black woman basketball star just as it was about to start an international conflict.

https://twitter.com/AdrienneLaw/status/1500167960987521025?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

We already knew Vladamir Putin was a homicidal liar, a wanna-be second coming of Stalin presiding over both an illegal invasion and the economic collapse of his own nation. Itโ€™d be no shock that he sicced his goons on Griner for leverage against the economic sanctions now leveled on him and his wealthy friends. But blame for Grinerโ€™s predicament is owed as much to continued, despicable pay disparities between men and women โ€“in sports and otherwiseโ€“as it is to Putinโ€™s lunacy.

The New York Times reports that 70 playersโ€“almost half of the WNBAโ€“play overseas during the offseason. And while itโ€™s not always about money, thatโ€™s a big motivator. WNBA superstars make about as much as mid-level marketing VPs in corporate America. At best, their careers afford them a comfortable living for as long as they can play, but theyโ€™re not set for life.

At 31, Grinerโ€™s current contract has her pulling down $664,544 over three years. Sheโ€™s the Phoenix Mercuryโ€™s highest-paid player, and has the eighth-highest average annual salary in the WNBA, according to SportTrac. The WNBAโ€™s highest-paid player, Seattle Storm guard Jewell Lloyd, will make $228,094 this year.

By comparison, the Brooklyn Netsโ€™ Kyrie Irving, 29, has the same number of NBA All-Star nods (seven) as Grinerโ€™s WNBA All-Star appearances, the same number of championships (one) and one fewer Olympic medal. Heโ€™s under contract for about $33.5 million this season (though he wonโ€™t make nearly that much because of the number of games missed due to his vaccination status).

Whether Griner was motivated by cash is unknown, but she definitely didnโ€™t need to go to keep in shape. Sheโ€™s one of the most dominant players in WNBA history, with seven All-Star selections, two Olympic gold medals and a WNBA chip on her resume. The former number-one pick out of Baylor averages almost 18 and 8 for her career. She can handle the ball, move off of it and has range and game on defense. No NBA playerโ€“or man in any American team sport at Grinerโ€™s levelโ€“would risk playing overseas in the prime of their careers for a few extra bucks. Thereโ€™s the NBA Summer League in Vegas, streetball tournaments like New Yorkโ€™s famed Rucker Park and international competition with Team USA or their home countries, but those are all about keeping skills sharp or adding to their trophy cases, not supplemental income.But WNBA budgets are so tight that the New York Libertyโ€“the team in the leagueโ€™s biggest marketโ€“was just fined $500,000 for violating the leagueโ€™s union contract by charting a plane for games. Imagine asking LeBron James to fold his legs up in coach or Jeanie Buss having to hide a charter flight to a Lakers-Knicks game from the NBA. The uneven pay and treatment mirrors that for women in other sports and beyond; the US Womenโ€™s National Team players just settled a pay disparity lawsuit with the U.S. Soccer Federation for $24 million.

If youโ€™re thinking right now that making six figured to play basketball and worrying about whether you fly commercial or private to games sounds like a good problem, consider that someone you knowโ€”or maybe youโ€”is probably on the wrong side of the gender pay gap in their own profession. On average, women in the U.S. still only make 82 cents for every dollar men earn, and the country ranks 30th in the world in terms of economic parity for women, according to the World Economic Forumโ€™s 2021 Gender Gap Report. The gap translates to food off the table for everyday moms and families. It means hard choicesโ€”or having no choice at allโ€”about living conditions, work schedules and childcare. It robs women of economic mobility and personal agency.And for basketball stars, it just might mean the difference between a calm offseason and being at the possibility of a decade in Russian prison.

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