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WNBA's Maya Moore Speaks about Pay, Labor and Going Pro (EXCLUSIVE)

Maya Moore

First Posted: 05/12/11 03:21 PM ET Updated: 07/12/11 06:12 AM ET

She was the number one draft pick for the WNBA, a four-season All-American at University of Connecticut and a world championships gold-medalist for the U.S. national team. But as Maya Moore heads into preseason training for the Minnesota Lynx, she reflects on how going pro means she’s not longer just a basketball player: She’s also a business. Moore shared her thoughts with The Huffington Post on unions, fair pay in athletics and what is soon-to-be the “Maya” brand:

My mom mounted a basketball hoop in our apartment when I was three years old. Years before the WNBA even existed, I dreamed of becoming a professional basketball player, getting paid to play a game I loved. Just over a month ago, that dream became a reality, and it is at once everything and nothing that I imagined.

Nothing can compare to the privilege of being a role model. The feedback I get from little girls (and boys) telling me that I inspire them -- or to hear that they pretend they're me as they're practicing in the backyard -- is the most gratifying part of my job. I love to play, but even more, I love that it matters to someone. It is an honor and privilege to have my passion be my job, and I never forget that.

But it’s different in the pros. In high school and college, it was always about the team, not the individual. Now, it’s about creating a “brand” and selling oneself as a star separate from, and bigger than, the team. Now, it’s a business.

Professional sports, like any business, seek to maximize profits. As always, there are an infinite number of ways to cut costs and increase profits, yet, as always, it’s labor that takes the cut. Whether you’re in Wisconsin, the NFL or the NBA, labor gets the (sharp) spikey end of the stick.

whether you're a player in the WNBA or NFL or a farm worker, the fundamental issue is the same: Workers want to be paid fairly for their labors. I want to be paid fairly for my work. Because so many of the salaries in professional sports are higher than the average working American’s, athletes are seen as out of touch and prima donnas when our unions ask for more. But when we are painted as greedy and mercenary, as with any message, we must look behind the curtain at who is controlling that perception.

Owners have made players “the bad guys.” This isn’t taxpayer money. It’s discretionary money that individuals choose to spend to come and watch players play and be entertained. It’s not as if better salaries and benefits take money out of our schools. The only thing players’ wages affect is owners’ bottom line. Like agricultural workers, our jobs are arduous and have long-term effects on our bodies. Like agricultural workers, not every athlete is getting rich off his or her labor: Some MLS soccer players take make $32,000 a year. I have colleagues in the WNBA making $36,570.

Some of us do make a lot -- and those are the names you hear touted in newspapers and on TV -- but many athletes will labor in obscurity until they are no longer strong enough, fast enough, young enough to keep up. The average pro-athlete is as disposable to management as the average farm worker. Yes, we get paid better and for that, there is no lack of gratitude, but the fundamental unfairness still stings.

The question to ask -- across all these labor disputes -- is: How much of the profits of their labor do laborers deserve to earn? Unsurprisingly, owners and laborers fall on different sides of this issue, and I find myself empathizing with any union that seeks safer, healthier and fairer working conditions for its members. I realize that as a player in the WNBA, I am among the most privileged union members and that my working conditions are enviable. I am grateful for that. But just because I’m blessed doesn’t mean that I can forget the plight of my fellow laborers, hardworking athletes and non-athletes alike.

The labor negotiations between players and owners, between unions and management, is a negotiation going on across the country and across the world. The specifics are different, but the argument is the same. We, laborers, believe we deserve a fair share of the profits that are made off of our efforts.

I hope, as negotiations continue to unfold between players’ unions and management, that those watching will connect what is happening in pro sports to what is happening across the country. As the economy contracts and profits shrink, there appears an organized and systematic attack against labor, whether the attack is against auto workers or basketball players. The size of the salary may be different but the principle is the same: everyone deserves to be paid a fair percentage of the profits that are made off our labor.

This is one of a series of posts from WNBA players that will run throughout the 2011 season, exclusively on Huffington Post. Next week we will hear from Nicole Powell of the New York Liberty.

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She was the number one draft pick for the WNBA, a four-season All-American at University of Connecticut and a world championships gold-medalist for the U.S. national team. But as Maya Moore heads into...
She was the number one draft pick for the WNBA, a four-season All-American at University of Connecticut and a world championships gold-medalist for the U.S. national team. But as Maya Moore heads into...
 
 
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MinneMike
I am 1% deal with it
11:03 PM on 06/04/2011
If equality is so important to sports, why don't the star players "redistribute the wealth?"
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MinneMike
I am 1% deal with it
11:01 PM on 06/04/2011
I'd like to see Maya get some exposure to managing an WNBA franchise before making a statement. And, as for the WNBA not being about the team and being more about the individual and the "brand," that is more symptomatic of a problem than a remedy.

It's hard to get arenas filled now for WNBA games, even a solid viewership on television. Then to take the individual brand as an emphasis? Most fans I know don't care so much about the "me" emphasis, the preening after scoring a basket, the "look at me" grandstanding.
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MinneMike
I am 1% deal with it
10:52 PM on 06/04/2011
As a Lynx fan, my greatest wish came through with the drafting of Maya. She is a remarkable person. Of course, she is free to speak out on any issue she chooses.

That said, I seems a bit odd that after a handful of weeks as a professional, that she would feel compelled to speak out on Labor relations.

As for those nasty capitalists, who pays for play?
03:04 PM on 05/18/2011
Maya, thanks for raising this issue - labor vs. capital - an old one indeed! Pro sports are actually part of the entertainment business where the "union" is really more of a "guild" (like SAG) than a labor union since each player (actor, etc.) is an independent contractor not a direct employee. But in pro sports, the players ARE the business, even more so than movies, TV or other forms of entertainment. The owners' main assets are the value of the their franchises (a brand) and the players under contract. I don't pretend to understand the pro sports business, but the real bottom line of team sports is the value of the FRANCHISE. The NY Yankees, the Boston Celtics, Manchester United, the LA Lakers, the Green Bay Packers all have values attached to their brands that is estimated to be the market value of that particular team. Winning is the primary factor within a given sport, but the popularity of the sport, the location (New York is going to be more valuable than, say, Memphis), the value of a hard asset (like a stadium if owned by the team principal) are all included. But the players, in the end, are the most important to winning! If you were a tennis player, you would be the owner and if successful, reap the benefits. For women athletes, tennis is probably the best sport, if you're successful. I'm out of words ...
01:25 AM on 05/15/2011
Completely disagree. Owners only owe employees a fair wage and a safe place to work. Profits are for owners who carry the risks of debt , covering payroll and providing employment. Maya Moore is a fine athlete but she is but a child who needs to work in the real world for at least an hour or two before she spouts off about what she thinks she is entitled to.
04:27 PM on 05/15/2011
you dont know the details of what your talking about.
06:14 PM on 05/15/2011
People might take you seriously if you spelled correctly. It's "YOU'RE" NOT "YOUR".
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fausto412
06:48 PM on 05/15/2011
yes, but "fair wage" totally depends on which side you are on....employee or employer.

In a sport employees carry the risk of long term health problems.
07:06 PM on 05/15/2011
That's true in many professions-mining, law enforcement, etc. The employee makes the choice to play or work in "hazardous" conditions. The employer provides the employment opportunity for any potential employee and shouldn't be punished for it. That is what true capitalism is, and that is, in fact, what I believe in (with the understood caveat that safe conditions are a must).

In today's world, fame and celebrity will be selected by most instead of ordinary "safe" desk jobs. Obviously, there is high risk, high rewards for many professional athletes but they don't want any of the down side.

I just am sick of the sense of entitlement-the "I deserve it all right now" attitude that seems pervasive in the world of professional sports.
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Lloyd Harris
Left handed, left footed, left winger
01:37 PM on 05/14/2011
Now I love this lady even more...big up to Maya Moore!!!

nuff respek!!!
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Tony McDay
11:10 AM on 05/14/2011
Love this woman!!! she is the complete package brains, beauty, and athleticism.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
08:56 AM on 05/14/2011
It is too bad she plays forward.  Had she been a guard, I think she could gone on to a good career in the NBA.
11:36 PM on 05/13/2011
She's very pretty
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mvaldivia32
"fade to bolivian" - Mike Tyson
01:53 PM on 05/13/2011
sorry girls, but guys don't want to watch you play basketball. we love to watch you play volleyball, gymnastics, tennis and even track, but basketball....it's just played so much better by men. the other sports i mentioned, girls play very well. it sometimes reminds me of high school athletics watching girls play in the wnba.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
09:00 AM on 05/14/2011
As a "guy", I disagree with your assessment of women's basketball.  It is a different game because most of the women are shorter than their male counterparts.  Women rely on ball handling, passing, shot accuracy and teamwork.  Men's basketball tends to become a sorry series of repetitive drives into the paint, followed by some behemoth stuffing the ball.
04:29 PM on 05/15/2011
bingo. i like watching girls b ball. they tend to rely on team work rather then individual skill.
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Bruce Forbes
Marx was right.
12:05 PM on 05/13/2011
Wow. Lectured on economics by Maya Moore.
01:51 PM on 05/13/2011
She was not only recognized for her playing she graduated with a 3.7 GPA.
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Anthony Garnett
10:43 AM on 05/13/2011
Okay Maya you need to realize that the WNBA has been losing money for years and the loses are coming out of the pockets of the NBA and its owners. Also you leave out the fact that many NBA arenas have been paid for with public funds from taxpayers. Yes most payers in the WNMA or MLS are paid in the mid-$30K range that is a due to the lack of a major TV contract and lack of popularity in this country.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
10:29 AM on 05/13/2011
Target Center is 20% full during your games. I've attended 2. The NBA pays for you to exist. Maybe start packing Target Center, then you can talk.
11:15 AM on 05/13/2011
Whty do you think the Lynx chose Moore to come play there. Just because the State of MN residents don't appreciate the true game of Basketball, played by females, does not mean that other
States are equally stunted. Women games are so much better than a group of guys who only do what they have to . Nothing more.

Check out other States and their attendance records. The State of CT Mohegan Arena is packed. NYC Liberty gets crowds. Phoenix.

Check out Maya Moore playing. she is class act with great talent. Compare her to Ray allen---they both came from UCONN.
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Howard53545
08:33 AM on 05/13/2011
Women's pro basketball is a joke, so be happy with what they give or go get a real job.
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KidShalleen
If I'm posted, a moderator is asleep.
11:45 AM on 05/13/2011
You OBVIOUSLY know squatt about Basketball, and the finer points of the game.
Better to be mute and thought impaired, than open your mouth and proving it.
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Tony McDay
11:12 AM on 05/14/2011
LOL Outstanding!!!
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Callyson
Trying to come up with a new creative microbio
12:53 AM on 05/13/2011
So nice to read the thoughts of an intelligent athlete. Good luck in the WNBA, Maya!