Napheesa Collier acknowledged that her harsh criticism of WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert was aimed at gaining leverage in CBA negotiations. She later admitted her comments were overly dramatic but necessary for the negotiation process.
Mentioned in this story
In September, Napheesa Collier said the WNBA had âthe worst leadership in the world,â tearing into league commissioner Cathy Engelbert amid contentious labor negotiations and frustration with officiating.
The players and owners agreed to a deal in Marchâand Collier is now walking back her viral comments. In an interview with NPR released Wednesday, the five-time All-Star admitted her comments may have gone overboard.
**â**Thinking about the state of the world, right, I think thatâs a little dramatic,â Collier said.
âIt was tense for a while just between the players and the league in general. I think it was something that needed to happen and it was something that furthered our CBA negotiations.â
Collierâs initial comments about Engelbert came after the Minnesota Lynx were eliminated in September. She said that part of criticism of leadership was because she understood how to lead a womenâs basketball league. Collier co-founded Unrivaled, a 3-on-3 womenâs basketball league that launched last year.
âWe have the best players in the world. We have the best fans in the world, but right now we have the worst leadership in the world,â Collier said last fall. âIf I didnât know exactly what the job entailed, maybe I wouldnât feel this way, but unfortunately for them, I do. We serve a league that has shown they think championship coaches and Hall of Fame players are dispensable and thatâs fine. Itâs professional sports, but I will not stand quietly by and allow different standards to be applied at the league level.â
Collier said that sheâs still âhappyâ with her decision to call out WNBA leadership, but she isnât pleased with how her statements may have impacted Engelbert personally. Engelbert said was âdisheartenedâ by Collierâs comments.
âI never want someoneâs personal life the way that it was for her,â Collier said. âShe got a lot of backlash for that. And what I was talking about was professionally. When you take things personally, that was an unintended consequence for sure.â
Napheesa Collier criticized Cathy Engelbert, claiming the WNBA had 'the worst leadership in the world' during labor negotiations.
Collier walked back her comments, stating they may have been dramatic but were intended to help further CBA negotiations.
The players and owners reached an agreement on a deal in March, following the contentious negotiations.
Luka Doncic gives a grim injury update as Lakers face tough playoff odds.

How Andree Jeglertz transformed Manchester City into WSL champions

PSG secures Champions League final spot after 1-1 draw with Bayern Munich
Tyler Glasnow and Lance McCullers Jr. exited a game due to injuries during the Dodgers' 12-2 victory over the Astros. Glasnow left with lower back pain after achieving his 1,000th career strikeout.
Colts show support for Anthony Richardson Sr. despite trade request.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
Collier said that she has not spoken to Engelbert about the comments she made last year, but that the two did speak during marathon CBA negotiations in March.
At the WNBA finals last fall, Engelbert essentially accused Collier of lying, saying she âcertainly did not sayâ comments Collier recounted about Caitlin Clark.
At the WNBA draft last month, Engelbert was asked about her future as commissioner. The former Deloitte CEO pushed back aggressively and suggested the questionâasked by a womanâwas sexist.
âI do crack up how everybodyâs focused on me, and you should be focused on the hundreds of amazing women, and thousands of women who run this league outside of myself ⊠I wonder whether you would ask that of a man, by the way, but I realize as women we get asked different questions than men do,â Engelbert said.
The post Napheesa Collier Admits Cathy Engelbert Rant Was For CBA Leverage appeared first on Front Office Sports.