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On today’s New Year’s Eve edition of The Daily Run, Tasha closes out 2025 by looking squarely at the WNBA’s labor cliff, the wobble at Grand Slam Track, and the coming “volleyball wars” between MLV and LOVB. This one is about money, power, and how fans can actually watch it all.
Tasha opens with a WNBA CBA reset, explaining why December 31 is not a technical deadline, but still feels like one. She breaks down the 40‑day CBA extension, the 48‑hour termination clause that could trigger a January work stoppage, and why “no press release tonight” might be the only good sign fans get. The focus is on the league’s “middle class” rather than just the stars, asking whether owners will finally build a system where the 9th and 10th players on the bench can breathe instead of just celebrating the handful of seven‑figure contracts. She also lays out how Portland and Toronto are stuck in expansion limbo, unable to draft, sign, or plan with a compressed offseason looming the longer this drags on.
From there, the show moves to the track. Tasha walks through Grand Slam Track’s mounting financial crisis, noting reports of roughly $13 million in unpaid prize money and appearance fees from its debut season and Michael Johnson’s public vow that there will be no 2026 season unless athletes are made whole. She highlights the whiplash between new signings and canceled events, calling it a dangerous wobble for a league that was supposed to revolutionize track and field but now risks burning trust with many of the world’s best runners. She closes the segment with a quick Unrivaled check‑in, reminding listeners that the 3‑on‑3 league tips off in five days and that it is quickly becoming a core part of the women’s hoops offseason.
The Main Event dives into what Tasha calls the “volleyball duopoly.” She breaks down how Major League Volleyball (MLV) and League One Volleyball (LOVB) are both launching next week but selling very different vibes and products. MLV leans into big‑arena spectacle, Bolt6 tech, frequent substitutions, and a Friday‑night‑out feel that mirrors the pro leagues fans already know. LOVB, by contrast, emphasizes community, international‑style substitution rules, Olympic‑caliber six‑rotation play, and rosters loaded with current or recent Team USA stars. Tasha explains where to watch each league, from ION and The Roku Channel for MLV to ESPN, USA Network, and the free Victory+ app for LOVB, then offers a simple verdict: if you want the party, go MLV; if you want the purity, go LOVB.
She closes by inviting listeners to pick a side: Will the WNBA get a deal, can Grand Slam Track actually find the money, and which volleyball league are you rolling with in 2026?
If you like rolling with me on Ms. Main Event, do not be shy. Tap in on Substack, hop over to YouTube, jump into the convo on Threads, or lurk on Instagram and Facebook. I am even on BlueSky trying to figure that place out.
It is all the same handle: @MsMainEventPod.
And if you want to help keep these deep dives coming, Ko Fi is where you can put a little love behind the grind.https://ko-fi.com/msmaineventpod
Thanks for reading Ms. Main Event! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
By Tasha PierceOn today’s New Year’s Eve edition of The Daily Run, Tasha closes out 2025 by looking squarely at the WNBA’s labor cliff, the wobble at Grand Slam Track, and the coming “volleyball wars” between MLV and LOVB. This one is about money, power, and how fans can actually watch it all.
Tasha opens with a WNBA CBA reset, explaining why December 31 is not a technical deadline, but still feels like one. She breaks down the 40‑day CBA extension, the 48‑hour termination clause that could trigger a January work stoppage, and why “no press release tonight” might be the only good sign fans get. The focus is on the league’s “middle class” rather than just the stars, asking whether owners will finally build a system where the 9th and 10th players on the bench can breathe instead of just celebrating the handful of seven‑figure contracts. She also lays out how Portland and Toronto are stuck in expansion limbo, unable to draft, sign, or plan with a compressed offseason looming the longer this drags on.
From there, the show moves to the track. Tasha walks through Grand Slam Track’s mounting financial crisis, noting reports of roughly $13 million in unpaid prize money and appearance fees from its debut season and Michael Johnson’s public vow that there will be no 2026 season unless athletes are made whole. She highlights the whiplash between new signings and canceled events, calling it a dangerous wobble for a league that was supposed to revolutionize track and field but now risks burning trust with many of the world’s best runners. She closes the segment with a quick Unrivaled check‑in, reminding listeners that the 3‑on‑3 league tips off in five days and that it is quickly becoming a core part of the women’s hoops offseason.
The Main Event dives into what Tasha calls the “volleyball duopoly.” She breaks down how Major League Volleyball (MLV) and League One Volleyball (LOVB) are both launching next week but selling very different vibes and products. MLV leans into big‑arena spectacle, Bolt6 tech, frequent substitutions, and a Friday‑night‑out feel that mirrors the pro leagues fans already know. LOVB, by contrast, emphasizes community, international‑style substitution rules, Olympic‑caliber six‑rotation play, and rosters loaded with current or recent Team USA stars. Tasha explains where to watch each league, from ION and The Roku Channel for MLV to ESPN, USA Network, and the free Victory+ app for LOVB, then offers a simple verdict: if you want the party, go MLV; if you want the purity, go LOVB.
She closes by inviting listeners to pick a side: Will the WNBA get a deal, can Grand Slam Track actually find the money, and which volleyball league are you rolling with in 2026?
If you like rolling with me on Ms. Main Event, do not be shy. Tap in on Substack, hop over to YouTube, jump into the convo on Threads, or lurk on Instagram and Facebook. I am even on BlueSky trying to figure that place out.
It is all the same handle: @MsMainEventPod.
And if you want to help keep these deep dives coming, Ko Fi is where you can put a little love behind the grind.https://ko-fi.com/msmaineventpod
Thanks for reading Ms. Main Event! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.