I have been told countless times over the last 48 hours that I am a conspiracy theorist.
That I do not know basketball.
That I do not understand the WNBA.
And that my articles are too long.
So I wrote this...
I do not believe there is some organized, calculated operation to take down Caitlin Clark.
That would be too simple.
The truth is deeper... and far more damaging.
Caitlin Clark walked into a league that spent nearly three decades convincing itself that its weaknesses were culture.
For years, the WNBA was not a mainstream sports product.
It was a cause.
A talking point.
A subsidized idea.
A league people were told they should support, even when the product on the floor often failed to earn that support from casual fans.
The empty seats were excused.
The financial struggles were excused.
The rough offensive flow was excused.
The poor spacing was excused.
The inconsistent officiating was excused.
The excessive physicality was excused.
The lack of mainstream interest was excused.
And anytime fans questioned the product, the answer was usually the same:
You just do not understand women’s basketball and you're racist.
That was the lie the league told itself for too long.
Because a lot of fans understood basketball perfectly fine.
They just did not like what they were watching.
Too often, the WNBA confused physicality with quality.
It confused survival with success.
It confused being protected with being excellent.
It confused an insulated culture with a strong one.
And then Caitlin Clark arrived.
She did not come in asking people to support the league out of obligation.
She made people want to watch.
That is the difference.
Caitlin brought range, pace, vision, passing angles, court gravity, creativity, and real basketball electricity.
She made regular-season games feel like events.
She made casual fans stop scrolling.
She made people who had ignored the WNBA for years suddenly care about matchups, rotations, officiating, coaching decisions, and league standards.
And that is where the collision happened.
Caitlin Clark exposed the gap between what the WNBA had convinced itself was good enough and what mainstream sports fans actually expect.
Fans want skill.
They want spacing.
They want pace.
They want shooting.
They want smart coaching.
They want fair officiating.
They want stars protected.
They want basketball that looks modern, intelligent, and entertaining.
They did not show up to watch Caitlin get grabbed, held, shoved, bumped, and treated like every possession needs to become a wrestling match in the name of “physicality.”
They also did not show up to watch the basketball constantly pushed into the background while social messaging, league-approved narratives, and cultural lectures compete for center stage.
That is not evolution.
That is a league clinging to old habits because it does not know how to handle the future standing right in front of it.
And Caitlin Clark is the future.
That does not mean she is perfect.
She is not.
That does not mean veterans have no value.
They do.
That does not mean physicality has no place in basketball.
It does.
But there is a difference between physical basketball and ugly basketball.
There is a difference between toughness and fouling.
There is a difference between defensive pressure and mugging someone off the ball.
There is a difference between culture and bad habits that went unchallenged because not enough people were watching.
Caitlin did not create the league’s problems.
She exposed them.
She exposed the officiating.
She exposed the coaching gap.
She exposed the outdated style.
She exposed the resentment toward new fans.
She exposed the discomfort some people have with a player becoming bigger than the system that was supposed to contain her.
And more than anything, she exposed a league that is still trying to force a generational player into an old version of basketball that she has already outgrown.
That is why this does not feel like a conspiracy.
It feels like resistance to change.
The WNBA finally got the player who could push the league into a new era, and too many people inside the ecosystem seem determined to make her prove she belongs in the old one.
That is backwards.
You do not take the most skilled, market-changing player your league has ever seen and ask her to shrink into the culture that failed to attract mainstream fans in the first place.
You build around her.
You modernize around her.
You protect what she represents.
Because she is not just another player.
She is the mirror.
She is showing the league what it has been, what it is, and what it could become if it would stop defending its flaws as tradition.
And the frustrating part is that the next generation is already here.
You can see it with Caitlin.
You can see it with Paige Bueckers.
You can see it with Sonia Citron.
You can see it with Aliyah Boston.
You can see it with JuJu Watkins.
The skill is changing.
The training is better.
The footwork is better.
The shooting is better.
The spacing is better.
The basketball IQ is better.
But too much of the league around them is still operating like nothing has changed.
Same coaching habits.
Same officiating problems.
Same marketing instincts.
Same defensive excuses.
Same resentment toward criticism.
Same belief that the old WNBA culture must be protected, even if it means slowing down the very players who could make the league bigger than it has ever been.
That is the real story.
Caitlin Clark is not being taken down by some secret plan.
She is being resisted by a league that still does not fully understand what she represents.
She represents a better product.
A bigger audience.
A more skilled game.
A more modern game.
A version of women’s basketball that does not need to be sold as charity, activism, obligation, or guilt.
It can be sold as basketball.
Great basketball.
But that requires the league to stop pretending its weaknesses are sacred.
It requires officials to clean up the game.
It requires coaches to modernize.
It requires veterans to adapt.
It requires media voices to stop protecting the old product from honest criticism.
And it requires the WNBA to stop resenting the very fans it spent decades trying to attract.
So no, I do not think there is a coordinated takedown of Caitlin Clark.
I think it is bigger than that.
I think Caitlin walked into a league that spent years convincing itself its flaws were culture.
And now that a generational player has arrived to expose the difference, too many people are trying to humble her instead of learning from her.
That is not Caitlin Clark’s failure.
That is the league refusing to recognize the future.
Typical. Of Course It Worked. by Scott C. Holstad — Piker Press https://t.co/2cDg5xy72s Thanks to The Piker Press for publishing my short NF essay (humor) yesterday. More on the way. Cheers! - Scott #nonfiction#essay#humor#thepikerpress
@williampatteson Sick to damn death of athletic divas at UT. Every fucking year. We don't need this jerk, he doesn't want to be there, let him go back to Ohio or WTH he wants to be. We want players who want to play for UT -- not assholes who think they're bigger than any program. Enough!
Let me make sure I’m reading this right.
Peter Thiel backed Trump early, before most of Silicon Valley would even say his name out loud.
JD Vance, the man Thiel helped bankroll and elevate, is now sitting one heartbeat from the presidency.
Elon Musk, his old PayPal ally, is the richest man on Earth and standing over what looks like one of the biggest financial launches in modern history.
Thiel’s fund got into SpaceX early. He bet on the machine before the rest of the country even knew it was being built.
Now look around.
The people he wanted near power are near power.
The companies he backed shape defense, data, space, money, surveillance, and politics.
The future he invested in is no longer theoretical. It is running the table.
So why leave now?
Why Argentina?
Why step away when the board finally looks exactly how he wanted it?
Either he already won, or he sees something coming the rest of us haven’t been told yet.
@Vol_Rowing@Vol_Sports Fantastic! Congrats. This is so exciting! You've got some ancient alum living in Pennsylvania (me) rooting for you like crazy. Wearing my UT Rowing shirt & everything. Keep it up. Thanks for your amazing effort. So proud. Confident you'll win it all. #GBO#govols#tennesseerowing
No. 1 ranked and conference champion @Vol_Rowing cleaned up with SEC honors!
Coach of the Year - Kim Cupini
Rower of the Year - Meg Flanagan
Freshman of the Year - Frida Werner Foldager
In addition, nine Lady Vols were named to the All-SEC Rowing Team.
https://t.co/FYzWfeHkDf
Khanna on DNC autopsy: Did you notice it doesn’t mention Gaza? This party needs to start telling hard truths. One of those truths is that Israel committed a genocide—that we shouldn’t give a single dollar to commit that genocide. That was an issue in 2024, it will be an issue in 2026 and 2028. So we need another report on the impact of Gaza on 2024.
Alien Buddha Zine 87 is now available!!!
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Also Featuring: Gia Rose, J. Rocky Colavito, Martina Reisz Newberry, Pip Pinkerton, Alex Grehy, Sanjeev Sethi, James Benger, Joe Farley, Rickey Rivers Jr, Scott C. Holstad, Zak Cowell, Lynn White, CL Bledsoe, Kathryn Lee Hamilton, Andy Smith, Andrew K. Peterso, Joanne Macias, Michael Gushue, Shawn Scott Smith, Joshua Walker, and Dawn Colclasure