Anyone else notice that when a bill is beneficial to US, it takes hearing after hearing and infinite committee meetings to maybe pass the house
But when it's for Israel or Ukraine, it's passed before any of us even knew there was a bill
So under full Republican control, the Republican controlled Senate can’t pass the Save America Act for election integrity, the House just passed a bill giving another $9 billion to Ukraine, Republicans are planning to merge our military with Israel’s military while Trump has us in another foreign war that’s costing $2 billion a day and has driven gas over $4.50, and not a single person has been held accountable for the pedo Epstein files.
If you're a head coach, and NONE of your former players come out in defense of your play-calling -- and, in fact, gleefully point out its predictability -- then perhaps (to paraphrase Shakespeare) the fault is not in your star, but in yourself.
Jon Cooper is a great coach who probably deserves to have one or two Jack Adams already under his belt.
That said, this is one of the most underserving and charity-case awards I have ever seen handed out.
Lindy Ruff was unequivocally robbed.
Won the division ⬜️
Cleared expectations for season ⬜️
Disciplined team ⬜️
Lack of ELITE players to rely on ⬜️
Gold Medal ⬜️
Top-5 team in man games lost ⬜️
Blamed everyone but himself for team failures in the media ✅
Congrats on the lifetime achievement award 👏
11 players in the first quarter is not normal basketball. 😭
That’s not a rotation. That’s a fire drill.
No serious team can build rhythm when the coach is subbing like somebody playing 2K with auto rotations on 🤦🏻♀️ 🤡 @IndianaFever
Let me reframe this for you. This is the government questioning the government to see if the government covered up for the government in the Epstein files. Shockingly, the government told the government that the government did nothing wrong.
I’m going to say this as calmly as possible:
Watching Caitlin Clark in the WNBA has become genuinely hard to stomach.
Not because she struggles sometimes. Not because she makes mistakes. Not because she gets criticized. That comes with being great.
It’s hard to stomach because it has become obvious that the league, the officials, the media, the players, and even her own organization have all decided that the most important thing is not letting Caitlin Clark become too big.
And that is insane.
This league was handed the most marketable, electric, revenue-generating player women’s basketball has ever seen, and instead of building around the moment, too many people seem obsessed with humbling her.
She gets fouled. Held. Hit. Cheap-shotted. Mocked. Targeted. Then when she reacts like a normal competitor, suddenly everyone wants to analyze her attitude.
No.
Her attitude is not the story.
The story is that a generational player is being treated like a problem by the very league she helped drag into mainstream relevance.
This reminds me of the worst kind of youth coach... the one who sees a special player, feels threatened by her talent, and slowly drains the joy out of her in the name of “teaching humility.”
That is what this looks like.
The freedom she played with at Iowa is disappearing. The fire is still there, but the joy looks damaged. The confidence looks weighed down. She looks like someone constantly fighting the refs, opponents, narratives, coaching decisions, jealousy, and a league culture that should be protecting its golden opportunity instead of resenting it.
And let’s be honest: Stephanie White has not helped.
Benching Caitlin Clark randomly when she is controlling the game tempo, or having your best shooter off the floor in critical game ending minutes when a victory is within reach is basketball malpractice. Limiting her rhythm, downplaying her greatness, benching momentum, and treating her like just another piece instead of the engine is absurd.
You do not take a player who changed the economics of your sport and manage her like you’re afraid her greatness might offend the room.
Nike deserves criticism too. Other players get signature shoes rolled out with urgency, while the biggest draw in women’s basketball is somehow still waiting on that signature shoe. That is not confusing. That is revealing.
Fans are not stupid.
They see the fouls.
They see the double standards.
They see the jealousy.
They see the media resentment.
They see the league benefiting from her popularity while refusing to fully embrace her.
And here is the part the WNBA better understand quickly:
People are not tuning in to watch Caitlin Clark be humbled.
They are tuning in to watch Caitlin Clark be great.
If she walked away tomorrow, the fans would follow her. The sponsors would follow her. The energy would follow her. The high salaries and the charter jets would follow her. And the league would be forced to confront the uncomfortable truth it keeps trying to avoid:
Caitlin Clark did not need the WNBA nearly as much as the WNBA needed Caitlin Clark.
At some point, her family, her agent, and her team need to ask a hard question:
How much longer do you let a league profit from her while allowing the culture around her to beat the spirit out of her?
Because from the outside looking in, this does not look like normal adversity anymore. It looks like abuse.
It looks like a league trying to break the very player who made millions of people care.
https://t.co/AAxFrO46Z4
In between the last 2 Fever/Valkyries games there were games where:
Sonia Citron shot 3/12
Rhyne Howard shot 4/14
Chelsea Gray shot 2/10
Breanna Stewart shot 4/11
Jonquel Jones shot 3/11
Arike Ogunbowale shot 5/20
Sabrina Ionescu shot 4/15
Olivia Miles shot 4/14
Skylar Diggins shot 4/12
A’ja Wilson shot 8/20
I never saw discussion about any of that but, the WNBA media will make CC having a bad game their personal brand for a week. For not being the “Face of the league”, they only care about her.
Except for the 6,346 1st place finishes and the 10,888 top three finishes that boys and men have stolen from girls and women, in well documented female sports events.
Except for the 678 well documented female records broken by boys and men, including 39 world records.
Except for the well documented 927 females who were robbed of $2,469,176 in prize money, by males.
In the spring of 2025, 12 State high School girls' championships in Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, California, and Washington, were won by boys. AB Hernandez was one of them, he and others struck again this year, including Becky Pepper Jackson, a boy who just won the WV State Girls' Championship in shot put.
Thousands of girls and women have been displaced in their own sports, by boys and men. Many have been sanctioned, threatened, and banned, for complaining about it.
(Numbers above are as of May 28, 2026)