Media periods have been a crowded occasion for the Fever this season, but it surely’s had little to do with the on-court efficiency of one of many league’s worst groups. As a substitute, it’s typically been about Caitlin Clark and the storylines which have adopted her, from Chennedy Carter’s onerous foul to the rookie sensation being left off Staff USA.
Thursday was no completely different. Cameras flocked to Gainbridge Fieldhouse not as a result of the Fever had been returning residence for the primary time in two weeks, however due to one other storyline about Clark away from the courtroom.
Throughout Fever shootaround on Thursday morning in Indiana, Clark was requested by Jim Trotter of The Athletic for her ideas on her identify being utilized in “tradition wars” which have largely sparked up lately after she was left off the U.S. Olympic roster heading to Paris, making a firestorm of reactions from followers to politicians alike.
Whereas her response to questions on that might be considered as an try to keep away from additional stoking the flames, it didn’t do a lot to smother them, both.
#IndianaFever’s Caitlin Clark on her identify being weaponized in non-sports subjects:
“It’s not one thing I can management. … And to be sincere, I don’t see lots of it.”
“Folks can discuss what they wish to discuss. … I’m simply right here to play basketball.”
Qs by @JimTrotter_NFL pic.twitter.com/VhGC7cIgLf
— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) June 13, 2024
Clark has reiterated a number of occasions all through her rookie season that she is each not on social media, and doesn’t talk a lot with these across the league, outdoors of former Iowa teammate Kate Martin. Her focus has been on her Fever teammates and dealing on enhancing on the courtroom.
But when one felt like that reply left one thing to be desired, they weren’t alone. In actual fact, Dijonai Carrington of the Connecticut Solar took specific points with Clark’s response and tweeted about it.
Dawg. How one can’t be bothered by their identify getting used to justify racism, bigotry, misogyny, xenophobia, homophobia & the intersectionalities of all of them is nuts. All of us see the sh*t. All of us have a platform. All of us have a voice & all of them maintain weight. Silence is a luxurious.
— dιjonaι carrιngтon♛ (@DijonaiVictoria) June 13, 2024
To be clear — and to push again on some extra dangerous religion narratives — not each WNBA participant feels that manner. In an look on “Podcast P with Paul George,” Dallas Wings ahead Satou Sabally supplied empathy for Clark.
“It’s actually, actually onerous to place that a lot strain on a younger girl to be a spokesperson for issues that the USA, and actually globally and traditionally, now we have struggled with as a complete society,” Sabally mentioned. “Are you able to discuss white privilege? Sure you may. However do you must be the spokesperson for that? I don’t suppose so. If that doesn’t come from her, I believe it’s unfair to place that burden on somebody.”
It’s additionally fully plausible that Clark hasn’t seen a lot of the controversy or tradition wars surrounding her identify, contemplating how little she says she is on social media. However it’s additionally fully truthful to count on extra out of her in denouncing any type of bigotry as effectively.
Whereas Clark will not be liable for how her identify is used, it’s additionally naive to disregard the way it’s been used and what has occurred to those that have fallen into her orbit this season. Even when Clark doesn’t usually use social media, the likes of the Sky’s Chennedy Carter and Carrington, who additionally went considerably viral on Monday in her recreation towards the Fever after mocking Clark following a foul name, do.
And people gamers have been subjected to among the most excessive nastiness that comes with being on-line. They’ve been those which have handled the racism and bigotry that Carrington tweeted about. The Sky, for instance, had a person wait outdoors their resort to harass them as they exited the bus simply days after Carter’s onerous foul towards Clark.
Even Clark’s teammate Aliyah Boston discovered herself within the crossfire. After struggling to begin the season, Boston deleted her social media off her cellphone attributable to all of the hate levied her manner.
All of this has lengthy since crossed the road previous regular basketball discourse to grow to be one thing a lot worse. Chiney Ogwumike, a former WNBA participant turned analyst for ESPN, has supplied impassioned pleas on a number of events, talking out towards the polarization across the league. The dialog has veered away from sports activities and into way more critical discussions about race, gender and sexuality, with Clark’s identify proper on the middle of a lot of them.
Clark didn’t ask to be concerned in a lot of this. She didn’t ask to be fouled by Carter. She didn’t ask to be left off Staff USA. And he or she isn’t asking for her identify for use in these aforementioned tradition wars, both.
However whereas Clark can sit again and never hear the noise, many round her, good friend or foe, don’t essentially have that luxurious. And silence from Clark not solely doesn’t assist the difficulty, it might be perceived by some as a silent endorsement of the actions.
Posed with an opportunity to handle the subject once more previous to Thursday’s recreation towards the Dream, Clark had a a lot stronger response to a query from James Boyd of The Athletic.
I requested #IndianaFever’s Caitlin Clark immediately about her identify being weaponized for racism/misogyny (as Dijonai Carrington alluded to):
“It’s disappointing. … All people in our world deserves the identical quantity of respect. The ladies in our league deserve the identical quantity of respect.” pic.twitter.com/gyAWBqGG8c
— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) June 13, 2024
Given the good thing about hindsight, Clark doubtless would have gone with the second response to the primary query to keep away from the state of affairs. Whether or not the delay was a matter of realizing she wanted to phrase her reply higher, or the extra direct query resulting in a extra clear, direct response, Clark’s feedback pregame had been far more forceful, even when they nonetheless doubtless gained’t fulfill those that really feel she hasn’t carried out sufficient to name out these utilizing her identify to gasoline racist and homophobic narratives.
It’s additionally price remembering that Clark goes by means of all of this for the primary time. She’s a 22-year-old rookie who was thrust into the highlight for the WNBA. She’s been forged into a task as a spokesperson for points that existed lengthy earlier than her, and should not but be snug with that standing.
School supplied a type of insulation that led to her not being fairly on the middle of those issues as typically, save for maybe her showdown within the nationwide title recreation towards Angel Reese and LSU.
However Iowa is in her previous. Clark is likely one of the faces of the WNBA and, truthful or foul, her phrases — or, in some circumstances, her lack of them — are beneath a brand new stage of scrutiny. It’s the blessing and the curse of dwelling a dream within the public eye.
Clark shouldn’t be liable for the worst takes about her. However as she seemingly realized on Thursday, silence about them isn’t the right strategy both.
You’ll be able to observe Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude.