WNBA All-Star Liz Cambage joins OnlyFans and makes more money in one week than her entire playing career

Former Los Angeles Sparks star Liz Cambage revealed she made more money starting an OnlyFans page than she did in her entire basketball career.

A four-time All-Star, she ended her playing in 2022 after mutually parting ways with the Sparks.

Cambage signed a one-year deal for $170,000 in February of that year before exploring other options.

The Australian center joined Israel’s Maccabi Bnod Ashdod and its current team, SiChuan Yuanada.

Additionally, she turned to OnlyFans, where her financial success went beyond her WNBA salary. Cambage reportedly made more in her first week on the platform than in all her years on the basketball court.

According to Cambage, joining OnlyFans was not just a financial move, but a way to express a different side of herself.

Elizabeth Cambage earns more from OnlyFans than she did in her entire basketball career

Cambage played for the Tulsa Shock, Dallas Wings, Las Vegas Aces and Los Angeles Sparks

Cambage played for the Tulsa Shock, Dallas Wings, Las Vegas Aces and Los Angeles Sparks

She left the WNBA to pursue other opportunities, including OnlyFans in 2022

She left the WNBA to pursue other opportunities, including OnlyFans in 2022

“Basketball was part of me, but not all of me,” she shared, adding that she joined the platform to post fashionable, artistic and evocative content that reflected her creativity.

Cambage’s success on OnlyFans reignited conversations about the pay disparity in professional sports, especially between the WNBA and NBA.

Although she earned $221,450 in her highest-paid season, the pay gap remains strikingly concerning.

Cambage now earns $1.5 million annually through OnlyFans as she continues to build her personal brand. She added that she’s “not closing any doors, but right now I’m focusing on building something new.”

In addition to her time with the Sparks, Cambage was drafted to the Tulsa Shock in 2011 and has also played for the Dallas Wings and Las Vegas Aces. Cambage was the WNBA’s scoring leader and made the All-WNBA First Team in 2018.

She also represented Australia, winning a silver medal at the 2018 FIBA ​​World Cup and a bronze medal at the 2012 London Olympics.

Cambage was the cover athlete for ESPN’s Body issue in 2019.