

The WNBA and players' association reached a verbal agreement on a new collective bargaining agreement, leading to a busy offseason with an expansion draft, free agency, and the WNBA draft before the season starts on May 8. Free agency negotiations are currently ongoing, with players able to officially sign contracts starting Saturday.
After months of negotiations, culminating in a week of marathon bargaining sessions last month, the WNBA and the players' association verbally agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement on March 18. That meant the league would have to conduct an expansion draft, free agency and the WNBA draft in a compressed offseason before the 30th season tips off May 8.
So here we are, with the negotiating period of free agency underway through Friday after teams sent out qualifying offers and core designations Monday and Tuesday. Players can officially sign contracts beginning Saturday.
Stay here all week for the latest buzz, news and reports surrounding the WNBA.
Trade grades | Mock draft | Ranking the free agents | Core designation


The Las Vegas Aces are finalizing an agreement for Jackie Young to return, sources told ESPN's Alexa Philippou. The deal is expected to be a one-year contract at the regular max ($1.19 million).


The Dallas Wings have traded forward Diamond Miller to the Connecticut Sun in exchange for center/forward Rayah Marshall.

Ten of 15 WNBA teams have extended core qualifying offers to players since free agency started Monday:
• Atlanta Dream: Allisha Gray
• Chicago Sky: Ariel Atkins
• Dallas Wings: Arike Ogunbowale
• Indiana Fever: Kelsey Mitchell
• Los Angeles Sparks: Kelsey Plum
• Minnesota Lynx: Napheesa Collier
• New York Liberty: Sabrina Ionescu
• Portland Fire: Bridget Carleton
• Seattle Storm: Ezi Magbegor
• Toronto Tempo: Marina Mabrey
The WNBA's core player designation is akin to the NFL franchise tag. A team can "core" a player to prevent them from becoming an unrestricted free agent by retaining their exclusive rights.
The core designation gives a team exclusive negotiating rights to a player and comes with a baseline contract of a fully guaranteed one-year deal worth the supermax ($1.4 million in 2026), though the player can negotiate different terms.
The core designation can also be a way for a team to prevent a player from walking in free agency without getting anything in return as it ultimately executes a sign-and-trade with the star. -- Alexa Philippou



The Chicago Sky traded two-time WNBA All-Star Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream for first-round draft picks in 2027 and '28, ESPN's Kendra Andrews reported. The Dream also received 2028 second-round swap rights.
MORE: Trade grades: Dream get Reese, Sky get picks, one gets an A
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Free agency negotiations are underway, and players can officially sign contracts starting Saturday.
The new collective bargaining agreement, agreed upon on March 18, includes provisions that will impact the league's operations, including an expansion draft and a compressed offseason.
The WNBA's 30th season is set to tip off on May 8.



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