History has a way of repeating itself with America choosing white mediocrity over Black excellence.
In 1969, the NBA adopted the now-iconic silhouette based on Jerry West. By then, Bill Russell had already won 11 NBA championships in 13 seasons, revolutionized the game, and had just led the Celtics past West’s Lakers once again in the NBA Finals. West, despite being one of basketball’s all-time greats, had not yet won an NBA championship. His lone title would come in 1972.
Many have asked ever since: if the logo was going to represent basketball excellence, why wasn’t it Bill Russell, the most dominant winner the league had ever seen?
Now fast forward more than five decades.
The WNBA has one of the most accomplished players in basketball history in A’ja Wilson. She led the University of South Carolina to an NCAA championship, has won three WNBA championships, four league MVP awards, Olympic gold medals, Finals MVP honors, and has established herself as one of the greatest players the women’s game has ever seen.
Yet much of the conversation about the “face of the league” has centered on Caitlin Clark, a young white player who is still at the beginning of her professional career and, with no championships at either the NCAA or WNBA levels, has come remotely close to matching Wilson’s résumé of championships and accolades.
That raises an uncomfortable question:
Why does American sports culture elevate white stars as the defining image of a league while Black athletes who have built dynasties and accumulated historic accomplishments are treated as secondary?
Why does sustained Black excellence have to compete for the recognition that comes so naturally for white mediocrity?
Bill Russell deserved to be recognized as the defining symbol of his era.
A’ja Wilson deserves to be recognized as the defining player of hers.
The conversation isn’t about who’s the most talented. That’s obvious.
It’s about why America thinks only whiteness can represent greatness.
@CitronSonia is fkn trash 🗑️ @WashMystics . Kiki Irafen and Shakira Austin needs a damn guard to help them. Sonia Citron is overrated trash 🗑️ and needs to come off the bench
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Today, we remember Charlie Murphy on what would have been his 67th birthday.
Charlie's authenticity, fearlessness, and unforgettable storytelling left a lasting mark far beyond comedy.
A true cultural icon, his unforgettable lines are still quoted today.
Rest in peace.🕊️