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WOMEN’S BASKETBALL / EARL GUSTKEY : A Lucrative Market Might Close

When they blow the final horn on the night of April 4 at the women’s basketball Final Four, what then?

After they turn out the lights and the players and coaches leave and line up for the airport vans, another wave of talented U.S. female players will look ahead to the two worlds of women’s pro basketball, two oceans apart.

There is no pro women’s basketball in the United States, not since the Women’s Basketball League folded in the 1980s.

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About 125 U.S. women play overseas pro ball. And there is no news on anyone starting up another U.S. league.

Instead, the news is even worse for U.S. women who desire to play pro basketball. It is rumored that Japan’s pro basketball administrators, where about 25 Americans are playing, will ban Americans from playing there for at least one year, beginning next season.

Rumors of a ban on U.S. players sent New York player agent Bruce Levy to Japan recently. He has placed about 50 women in Japan’s league in recent years. U.S. players in Japan earn from $75,000 to $200,000, receive free apartments and cars, and are excused from Japan income taxes.

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Not NBA money, but not bad.

Levy says that the ban came about because some of Japan’s Olympic development officials feared tall U.S. women were dominating shorter Japanese centers, slowing their preparation for the Olympics.

“I met with the Japanese people and I asked them if they’d considered the public relations nightmare they could have--if they permanently banned U.S. players, most of them minority American women.

“Now I have a clearer picture of what’s happening. There will almost certainly be a ban next year, but I think it will be just for one year. Most of the basketball people I talked to were not in favor of excluding U.S. players, but the old-guard men who run the sponsoring corporations carried the day.

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“There is now a great deal of sensitivity in Japan to this question. None of the people I talked to wanted to be perceived as denying career opportunities to anyone.

“But they also feel their first responsibility is to Japan’s Olympic program. I suggested limiting U.S. players to those 6-1 or under, but got no response.”

Levy said U.S. women are treated well in Japan.

“It is a major cultural change for them, but they’re treated well,” he said. “And not once have I had a single problem in getting a team to pay a woman what she’s owed. And that includes all 50 players I’ve sent over there.

“I’m preparing now to file suit against seven teams in Italy and Spain who stopped paying our players.”

Levy said Japan pays by far the most to U.S. players. Next come Italy (average: $75,000); Brazil and France ($50,000), and Spain ($25,000). On the low end, Luxembourg and Australia average about $1,500 per month.

How much would USC’s 6-foot-5 Lisa Leslie command as a pro?

“Lisa would get several hundred thousand a year in Europe, even if Japan isn’t there for leverage,” Levy said.

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Of a U.S. women’s pro league, Levy said:

“It won’t happen unless someone like Donald Trump or the NBA gets behind it. It’s a huge marketing project, and it requires backers with long-term vision, able to ride out the lean early years.”

One who was left with a sour taste of U.S. women’s pro basketball is Ann Meyers, the 1970s UCLA All-American.

“I haven’t heard a thing about a new league,” she said.

“You need someone with a lot of money and who is also willing to treat women pros like pro athletes.”

Meyers played one season with Houston in the WBA, then quit when her team stopped paying her.

“The whole experience was awful,” she said. “Those people still owe me $85,000.”

Levy, however, holds out hope for a U.S. league.

“I’ll tell you who would be happiest of all,” Levy said. “My 1992 phone bill was $42,000.”

Women’s Basketball Notes

The Pac-10 race has come down to a two-team duel between USC and Stanford. They don’t play each other again, and the Trojans, in the season’s final seven games, play only Washington (March 4) and Washington State (March 6) on the road. USC’s remaining home games: UCLA (Feb. 26, 9 p.m., Sports Arena), Arizona State (March 11, Sports Arena) and Arizona (March 13, Lyon Center). UCLA, all but out of it, has home dates remaining against Arizona (March 11) and Arizona State (March 13).

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