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'Why wouldn't we?' Caitlin Clark offered $5 million by Ice Cube's BIG 3 league
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Date:2025-04-19 01:42:00
Caitlin Clark could take her talents from the BIG TEN to the BIG 3.
Ice Cube's BIG 3 basketball league offered the Iowa phenom $5 million to play in the 2024 season. The rap mogul, born O'Shea Jackson, posted on X on Wednesday after the second round of the NCAA tournament to confirm TMZ's report of the offer.
"We intended the offer to remain private while Caitlin Clark plays for the championship. But I won’t deny what’s now already out there: BIG3 made a historic offer to Caitlin Clark," Jackson said while reposting TMZ's article. "Why wouldn’t we? Caitlin is a generational athlete who can achieve tremendous success in the BIG3."
TMZ reports that the $5 million is guaranteed and would be for eight games with the potential of two playoff games. According to the BIG 3 website, the 2024 season consists of 10 games. Clark, who is expected to be the No. 1 overall pick in the WNBA draft to the Indiana Fever next month, would also get revenue from sponsorship and merchandise. She would still be able to play in the WNBA because only two BIG 3 games conflict with the Fever's schedule.
Clark became the NCAA's all-time leading scorer this season when she passed Pete Maravich's record of 3,667 career points. She also topped Kelsey Plum's single-season scoring mark in Iowa's second-round game of the NCAA Tournament. The top-seeded Hawkeyes will take on the No. 5 seed Colorado Buffaloes on Saturday in the Sweet 16.
FOLLOW THE MADNESS: NCAA basketball bracket, scores, schedules, teams and more.
Ice Cube said the offer makes sense because the BIG 3 has broken boundaries for women. Hall of Famers Nancy Lieberman and Lisa Leslie are head coaches in the league. He said Clark's offer is "pathbreaking" because it continues to give women athletes choice and is a better alternative than playing overseas in "dismal and dubious foreign countries just to make ends meet." Brittney Griner was wrongfully detained in Russia for 10 months after being arrested for a vape cartridge while playing in the Russian Premier League. Other WNBA stars like Sabrina Ionescu and A'ja Wilson decided not to play overseas this offseason.
"With our offer, Caitlin Clark can make history and break down even more barriers for women athletes," Jackson said.
What is the BIG 3?
The BIG 3 is a 3-on-3 basketball league founded by Ice Cube in 2017. There are 12 teams that travel the country competing for an annual championship.
The 2024 season tips off on June 15 at Oakland Arena in the Bay Area. There are 10 games this season with matchups in Baltimore, Portland and wrapping up Aug. 18 at TD Garden, home of the NBA's Boston Celtics.
Former NBA players Allen Iverson, Joe Johnson, Stephen Jackson, Nick Young, Gerald Green and Rashard Lewis as well as famed Drew League MVP Frank "Nitty" Sessions have all played in the BIG 3.
The BIG 3 reportedly is not on great terms with the NBA, which owns the WNBA. In November, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Department of Justice started an investigation to see if the NBA violated anti-trust law in its dealings with the BIG 3. BIG 3 officials went to the department and said the NBA was trying to undermine it.
Would Caitlin Clark accept this offer?
In all likelihood, Caitlin Clark would not take the $5 million to join the BIG 3.
For one, she probably doesn't need the money. Although her rookie contract will likely be around $80,000 her first season. she's made $3.5 million through NIL deals and will continue getting major sponsorship money when she goes pro.
There's also the issue of player safety. Not that Clark would be afraid to play against men. Her dad famously put her on a boys' team when there wasn't a girls' team near her growing up. But there are different rules in the BIG 3 that emphasize defense and promote a more physical style of play.
And, although most of the BIG 3 games don't directly overlap with the Fever's schedule, the travel and practice schedule with the WNBA would certainly be complicated. Clark would probably want to make sure she's one hundred percent for the WNBA.
— Contributing: Lindsay Schnell
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