For many years, access to professional athletes inside locker rooms after games was an integral part of the media process. For journalists, being able to speak directly to players when the decisions and outcomes of the game are still freshest offers the potential for key insights, or at the very least a juicy quote to include in your post-game write-up.
In recent years, we’ve seen several instances of pro teams or leagues pushing back on that access. During the pandemic, many leagues temporarily limited locker room access. The NFLPA made a push in 2024 to limit locker-room access, which was met with strong pushback from media members. Almost all leagues have been reluctant to disallow it altogether, as it often remains the only direct access many media members have to large swaths of these athletes as they try to cultivate relationships, though many players have come to feel they no longer need those relationships.
Several years back, the WNBA changed its media policy to restrict media access to all locker rooms (though they can still request access to players after games). That move was met with harsh criticism by many media members, and continues to be a sore spot, especially when teams don’t make many players available for post-game press conferences. Defenders have long said that the move protects the sanctity of the locker room space for players and coaches, and offers them a respite from media attention and requirements that still exist.
There is also the undeniable conversation around the dynamic created when male journalists enter a women’s locker room, the inverse of the connotations female journalistshave been pushing back on for decades.
The debate kicked up again this weekend when reporter Ben Baby, who covers the NFL’s Bengals for ESPN, shared his frustration with the policy on X.
It still remains wholly ridiculous that the WNBA doesn’t have an open locker room media policy.
The only major sport in the U.S. that doesn’t have it. Bad for the fans and the growth of the game.
— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) May 9, 2026
“It still remains wholly ridiculous that the WNBA doesn’t have an open locker room media policy,” wrote Baby on X. “The only major sport in the U.S. that doesn’t have it. Bad for the fans and the growth of the game.”
The comments were like chum in the water for WNBA defenders, some of whom are themselves media members.
I think the WNBA has grown just fine without locker room media in all due respect.
We have a team valued at $1 billion and players salaries are up to 7 figures. I think it will be okay https://t.co/TK8xJydOUg
— Sara Jane Gamelli (@SaraJGamelli) May 9, 2026
With the way SOME men new to WNBA coverage have moved recently, I think media access should stay exactly how it is. Reporters already can request players postgame outside the podium if needed. The issue isn’t access — it’s respecting the boundaries of women athletes. https://t.co/tMo4lNsMBo
— C. C.,Esq. (@ItsCwaysWorld) May 9, 2026
The NCAA has open locker rooms in the postseason. The Texas women are always professional, and most reporters are as well. But it is kind of weird.
But I get it. We’d get to ask one question each night to same three players without it. The best content comes in the tournament. https://t.co/BC6WtLkA9J
— Danny Davis (@_dannydavis) May 10, 2026
Baby, also a journalism adjunct professor, did find a supporter in former ESPN and current The Atlantic personality Jemele Hill, who defended his point and explained why she feels locker-room access is a critical part of the athlete-media relationship.
View on Threads
View on Threads
View on Threads
For his part, Baby waded into a few back-and-forths with some of the people who engaged with his initial point.
Good for fans to hear more about players who aren’t the usual stars and get to know their stories as they unfold during the season.
And the better the storytelling, the more the game grows. Been true in every major sport.
— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) May 9, 2026
Thanks for the back-and-forth. In theory, this sounds great. I’ve long believed media access benefits the players and teams the most. Think that’s especially true in the modern landscape.
— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) May 9, 2026
Not for the faint of heart!!
— Ben Baby (@Ben_Baby) May 9, 2026
It doesn’t seem as though that policy will change anytime soon, so we can expect this debate to pop up again, likely when the media wants to talk to a player after an important game but is denied by the team (or the player).
The post Jemele Hill, ESPN’s Ben Baby push back on WNBA locker room media restrictions appeared first on Awful Announcing.

