Ogwumike, who said in the video it was 1:44 a.m. as she was recording herself, said their flight was delayed multiple times before it was canceled at 1 a.m. The team was rebooked for 9 a.m. Ogwumike said there weren’t enough hotel rooms for the entire team, so half of the team stayed the night in the airport.
Later Monday evening, the WNBPA released a statement on Twitter from Ogwumike calling for the league “to permit teams to invest in charter flights between games, beginning with the entire 2022 WNBA Playoffs, and continuing with a common sense, full-season solution beginning in 2023.”
“And in the spirit of collaboration,” Ogwumike continued, “we call upon both private and commercial airline companies to recognize this bold opportunity to lead: American, Delta, JetBlue, Southwest, United, NetJets, Wheels Up, JetSuiteX, among others: We encourage you to meet us at the table and partner with WNBA players to help eliminate the toughest opponent they face each season: travel.”
The WNBA declined to comment when reached by CNN on Monday night. Last month at the WNBA All-Star Game, WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said that the league will provide charters for both teams during the upcoming WNBA Finals.
“I think we’ll look for other opportunities to do charters like we have in the past,” Engelbert said at the time, on July 10. “People don’t know we did a bunch of charters during last year’s playoffs when we had a west to east with challenging one day’s rest or no days’ rest, so we’ll continue to look for those opportunities should our budget allow it. But we wanted to start kind of chipping away and do WNBA Finals.”
The Sparks are scheduled to host the Connecticut Sun on Tuesday.
The WNBA playoffs start August 17.