While speaking about recent criticism of the WNBA’s leadership in Las Vegas ahead of the start of the WNBA Finals, league commisioner Cathy Engelbert addressed the controversy head-on and outlined some planned changes to acknowledge the concerns voiced in recent days.

She also took the opportunity to dispute some inflammatory quotes that have been attributed to her this week.

“I was disheartened to hear that some players feel the league, and me personally, do not care about them or listen to them,” Engelbert said. “And if the players in the W don’t feel appreciated and valued by the league, then we have to do better and I have to do better.”

Engelbert added, “No one should ever doubt how deeply I care about this league, this game and every single player who makes the WNBA what it is.

“We value feedback, we listen to criticism, we remain committed to engaging in the difficult but necessary conversations that ultimately make us all stronger and better.”

Friday’s press conference before Game 1 of the finals marked Engelbert’s first public comments since her stewardship came under fire from some of the league’s biggest stars earlier this week.

Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier didn’t mince words in her criticism of WNBA leadership and Engelbert in her season-ending exit interview on Tuesday, saying Tuesday that “right now, we have the worst leadership in the world.”

With the collective bargaining agreement between the WNBA and its players set to expire at the end of this month, the timing of this dispute futher complicates an already tenuous dynamic between the players union and the league.

Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier shoots over Golden State Valkyries defenders in the WNBA basketball playoffs Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.

One of the biggest targets of Collier’s ire was perceived inconsistent officiating in the WNBA.

Engelbert said Friday that the league and the Women’s National Basketball Players Association continue to meet and negotiate with the hopes of avoiding a work stoppage. Along with that, Engelbert said she will meet with Collier next week.

“The league has a buzzword that they’ve rolled out as talking points for the CBA as to why they can’t give the players what we’re worth. That word is sustainability,” Collier said. “But what’s truly unsustainable is keeping a good product on the floor while allowing officials to lose control of games.

“Fans see it every night. Coaches, both winning and losing, point it out every night in pregame and postgame media. Yet leadership just issues fines and looks the other way. They ignore the issues that everyone inside the game is begging to be fixed. That is negligence.”

Collier’s comments came in the wake of an ankle injury sustained on a physical play that knocked her out of the Lynx’s semifinal series against the Mercury. Her coach Cheryl Reeve was later suspended after postgame comments criticizing the officiating in that game.

Engelbert said Friday that the league would establish a new task force with players’ and other stakeholders’ involvement to help WNBA officiating “evolve in step with the growth of the league” with the aim to “ensure player safety and exciting competition.”

Also in her remarks Tuesday, Collier said that in February, she met with Engelbert and brought up the pay disparity between veterans and new players in the league.

“I also asked how she planned to fix the fact that players like Caitlin (Clark), Angel (Reese) and Paige (Bueckers), who are clearly driving massive revenue for the league, are making so little for their first four years,” Collier said.

“Her response was, ‘Caitlin should be grateful she made $16 million off the court because without the platform that the WNBA gives her, she wouldn’t make anything.’

“In that same conversation, she told me, ‘Players should be on their knees thanking their lucky stars for the media rights deal that I got them,’” Collier continued.

When asked directly about those comments alleged by Collier, Englebert said Friday she was again “disheartened” with what she described as “a lot of inaccuracy about what I said or didn’t say.”

“Obviously I did not make those comments, the commissioner said speaking specifically about Collier’s description of Engelbert’s statement regarding Clark.

“Caitlin has been a transformational player in this league. She’s been a great representative of the game She’s brought tens of millions of fans to the game.”

Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever walks off the court following her team's game against the Phoenix Mercury at PHX Arena on September 02, 2025.

Clark, who has missed most of the 2025 season with injury, addressed Collier’s dressing down of WNBA leadership at a press conference on Thursday.

“I have great respect for Phee, and I think she made a lot of very valid points,” Clark said at her Indiana Fever exit interview. “I think what people need to understand: We need great leadership in this time across all levels.

“This is straight up the most important moment in this league’s history. This league has been around for 25-plus years, and this is a moment we have to capitalize on.”

The arrival of Clark and other high-profile young players have contributed to a boom in popularity for the long-struggling league.

“Everybody that’s in a place of power has a responsibility, and even myself,” Clark said. “We have a responsibility to make sure that this game is in a great place going forward with the CBA, and caring for our players and building this league to make sure it’s in a great spot for many years to come.”

Clark’s teammate Sophie Cunningham, whose season was also cut short due to injury, was more uncouth during her exit interview Thursday.

“I think that there a lot of people in the position of power in the WNBA,” Cunninghamd said. “They might be really great business people, but they don’t know sh*t about basketball, and that’s got to change.”

Game 1 of the WNBA Finals between the Phoenix Mercury and Las Vegas Aces will be played Friday night at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Nevada.

CNN’s Jill Martin contributed to this report.