The Phoenix Mercury are getting a rare break this weekend after enduring one of the WNBA’s toughest stretches of the season. They played four games in six days, including back-to-back outings in Las Vegas and Phoenix this week.

The Mercury split the back-to-back slate, falling to the Aces on Thursday before beating the expansion Golden State Valkyries on Friday behind another triple-double from Alyssa Thomas. Satou Sabally, the team’s leading scorer at 16.8 points per game, did not hold back when asked about the schedule.

“Terrible,” Sabally said after the win. “It’s like they don’t care about player safety, it’s like they don’t care about scheduling. And I mean, I only mentioned that one time in the beginning of the season, and I know people love to comment and say, ‘Oh, you guys want to get paid more, you guys need to play all these games,’ but at some point there’s a sports science to it. … We’ll play tomorrow and we’re professional. We’ll do it.”

Atlanta Dream vs Phoenix Mercury
Satou Sabally #0 of the Phoenix Mercury drives against Brionna Jones #24 of the Atlanta Dream during the second quarter at Gateway Center Arena on August 01, 2025 in College Park, Georgia.
Satou Sabally #0 of the Phoenix Mercury drives against Brionna Jones #24 of the Atlanta Dream during the second quarter at Gateway Center Arena on August 01, 2025 in College Park, Georgia.
Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

The 2025 WNBA season is the longest in league history at 44 regular-season games, up from 40 over the past two years, 36 in 2022 and 34 for nearly two decades before that.Yet the league did not extend the overall calendar, compressing more games into the same timeframe. That has meant more back-to-backs and fewer rest days, sparking player concern as teams navigate injuries and fatigue.

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Sabally, who also serves as a union representative, has been among the most outspoken voices as the WNBA and players’ association negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement. The current CBA expires after this season, and the players opted out early to push for sweeping changes.

Earlier this year, Sabally described the league’s opening CBA proposal as “a slap in the face,” highlighting the gap between players and leadership on issues such as salaries, revenue sharing, and health protections. Her latest comments draw attention to how scheduling has become as central to negotiations as compensation.

“Cathy [Engelbert] added a lot of games, and for us as players, recovery is so important. We put our bodies on the line every single time,” Sabally said earlier this summer. “We had nine games in 18 days. That’s not really responsible for a commissioner.”

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The Mercury, who have played 31 games so far, sit in the middle of the playoff picture as they fight through a demanding season. For Sabally and other veterans, the physical toll of an expanded schedule has made the stakes of the upcoming CBA all the more pressing.

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