WNBA is Woman’s World, Guided by Men
Half of women's basketball league coaches are men
July 19, 2011The Los Angeles women’s pro team’s newest coach - and the 6th out of 12 male team bosses - is Joe 'Jellybean' Bryant.
“We Got Game.”
That’s what the Women’s National Basketball Association - or WNBA - promised when the league was formed in 1996.
It set out to prove that women play an exciting, team-oriented game - albeit with fewer egocentric chest thumps and high-flying dunks of the basketball than muscular male players deliver.
The WNBA has survived with little television exposure into its 15th summer, thanks to extensive financial help from the male professional league and solid attendance in a few of its markets.
Other cities have not embraced the women’s game so well, however, and several WNBA franchises have folded over the years.
Donna Orender, who retired as WNBA commissioner after last season, said the best available coaches should be hired, period.
While the women’s pro game has been especially attractive to female fans - and an inspiration to female players who finally have a place to make a living at the sport - it has also drawn many male spectators, who say they appreciate unselfish play.
But an irritant for some in the league is that half of the 12 WNBA head coaches are men. Already this year, the Los Angeles Sparks franchise fired its woman head coach and replaced her with a man - the father of Kobe Bryant, the superstar guard of the L.A. Lakers men’s basketball team.
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2013-11-27
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