WNBA

WNBA commissioner criticized over failure to condemn abuse around Reese and Clark

Angel Reese (left) has been the target of online criticism during her rookie season.

Angel Reese (left) has been the target of online criticism during her rookie season. Photograph: Brad Penner/USA Today Sports

Angel Reese (left) has been the target of online criticism during her rookie season. Photograph: Brad Penner/USA Today Sports

WNBA players and their union have criticized recent comments from the league’s commissioner, Cathy Engelbert, that failed to condemn racist and bitter criticism from fans toward Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese.

Engelbert made an appearance on CNBC’s Power Lunch on Monday and was asked by anchor Tyler Mathisen about what he called the “darker” tone taken by fanbases on social media that brings race and sometimes sexuality into the conversation around a league where the majority of players are Black and many are gay.

“How do you try and stay ahead of that, try and tamp it down or act as a league when two of your most visible players are involved – not personally, it would seem, but their fanbases are involved – in saying some very uncharitable things about the other?” Mathisen asked.

Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark have become two of the most famous basketball players in America

Engelbert responded by saying, “There’s no more apathy. Everybody cares. It is a little of that Bird-Magic moment if you recall from 1979, when those two rookies came in from a big college rivalry, one white, one Black. And so we have that moment with these two.

“But the one thing I know about sports, you need rivalry. That’s what makes people watch. They want to watch games of consequence between rivals. They don’t want everybody being nice to one another.”

WNBPA executive director Terri Jackson issued a statement on Tuesday disagreeing with Engelbert’s comments.

“Here is the answer that the commissioner should have provided to the very clear question regarding the racism, misogyny, and harassment experienced by the players: There is absolutely no place in sport – or in life – for the vile hate, racist language, homophobic comments, and the misogynistic attacks our players are facing on social media,” the statement said.

The union statement went on to say that fandom should “lift up the game, not tear down the very people who bring it to life.”

Engelbert clarified her initial remarks on social media late on Tuesday night, writing, “To be clear, there is absolutely no place for hate or racism of any kind in the WNBA or anywhere else.”

Clark and Reese have brought new attention to the WNBA this season with attendance and ratings soaring. The pair have been rivals on the court since their college days when LSU topped Iowa in the national championship game in 2023.

Union vice-president Breanna Stewart, a nine-year veteran, said she was disappointed in Engelbert’s initial comments.

“To be honest, I saw the interview today, and have been in talks with Terri at the WNBPA,” Stewart said after a win over the Dallas Wings. “I think that it’s kind of disappointing to hear because the way that the fans have surged, especially behind Caitlin and Angel coming to this league, but also bringing, like, a race aspect, to a different level.

“And you know, there’s no place for that in our sport. I think that’s really what it is. We want our sport to be inclusive for race, for gender, and really a place where people can be themselves. So we wish, obviously, Cathy would have used her platform in a different way, and have made that a little bit better, kind of just telling the fans enough is enough.”

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