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DRAMA: WNBA investigating ‘hateful fan comments’ after Clark-Reese incident

WNBA investigating ‘hateful fan comments’ after Clark-Reese incident.

The players’ association encouraged the league to investigate.

 

“The WNBPA is aware of reports of hateful comments at yesterday’s game in Indianapolis and supports the WNBA’s current investigation into this matter,” the Women’s National Basketball Players Association said in a statement. “Such behavior is unacceptable in our sport. Under the WNBA’s ‘No Space for Hate’ policy, we trust the league to thoroughly investigate and take swift, appropriate action to ensure a safe and welcoming environment for all.”

 

The WNBA announced plans for its “No Space for Hate” platform Thursday, billing it as a “a multi-dimensional platform designed to combat hate and promote respect across all WNBA spaces — from online discourse to in-arena behavior.”

 

 

“We believe that basketball can be a unifying force — a place where people from all walks of life come together not just to watch a game, but to connect,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement last week. “We want our arenas, and our social platforms filled with energy and fandom — not hate and vitriol.”

 

The Fever said they are cooperating with the league’s investigation.

 

“We are aware of the allegations of inappropriate fan conduct during yesterday’s game and we are working closely with the WNBA to complete their investigation,” Pacers Sports & Entertainment CEO Mel Raines said in a statement. “We stand firm in our commitment to providing a safe environment for all WNBA players.”

 

Following the game, Reese and Clark downplayed the incident between them.

 

“Basketball play,” Reese said. “Refs got it right. Move on.”

 

“Let’s not make it something that it’s not,” Clark said. “It was just a good play on the basketball. I’m not sure what the ref saw to upgrade it, and that’s up to their discretion. It’s a take foul to put them at the free throw line. I’ve watched a lot of basketball in my life; that’s exactly what it was. I wasn’t trying to do anything malicious. That’s not the type of player I am.”

 

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Caitlin Clark’s triple-double leads Fever past Sky in opener

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Caitlin Clark drops triple-double in Fever’s season opener (2:18)

 

Michael Voepel

May 17, 2025, 09:56 PM ET

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INDIANAPOLIS — The Fever started their season Saturday with a blowout victory over the Sky, a triple-double from Caitlin Clark, a career milestone for Indiana newcomer DeWanna Bonner and a kerfuffle between Clark and Chicago’s Angel Reese.

 

Talk about a full opening day.

 

Gainbridge Fieldhouse was packed with 17,274 fans to see the Fever defeat the Sky 93-58, tying for the second-largest margin of victory in franchise history. Clark, last season’s rookie of the year and an All-WNBA first-team selection, got her third triple-double in the league after 17 in college at Iowa. She had 20 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists, plus 4 blocks.

 

Still, a lot of attention will go to a sequence in the third quarter. Clark, looking to stop Reese from getting a wide-open layup, tried to strip her of the ball and was called for a foul. Reese fell to the floor then got up to go after Clark, who walked away.

 

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Indiana’s Aliyah Boston, attempting to keep the two players apart, picked up a technical foul, which she didn’t know about until after the game when asked about it by media.

 

Boston, who finished with 19 points, 13 rebounds and 5 blocks, then expressed astonishment about getting T’d up. Clark told her, “I got it for you, don’t worry,” about the $200 fine.

 

As for the original action, for which Clark’s foul was upgraded to a flagrant 1, Clark she said she was making a play on the ball.

 

“Let’s not make it anything that it’s not,” Clark said. “I’m not sure what the refs saw to upgrade it; that’s up to their discretion after watching the initial whatever happened during the play and whatever happened afterward.

 

“It’s a take foul to put them at the free throw line rather than give up two points. That’s exactly what it was. I wasn’t trying to do anything malicious.”

 

Asked by a pool reporter after the game, crew chief Roy Gulbeyan explained the officials’ reasoning:

 

“The foul [by] Clark met the criteria for flagrant 1, for windup, impact, and follow-through for the extension of the left hand to Reese’s back, which is deemed not a legitimate basketball play, and therefore deemed unnecessary contact. After the foul, there is a physical taunt technical on Boston and a verbal technical on Reese, which offset.”

 

In a brief Sky postgame news conference, Reese — who had 12 points and 17 rebounds — said of the foul: “Basketball play. Refs got it right. Move on.”

 

Last season, Reese and then-Sky player Chennedy Carter were called for flagrant fouls on plays against Clark in two different games. The foul against Carter wasn’t upgraded until the next day, however.

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Both Clark and Reese have downplayed any personal rivalry between them. But their fan bases have been at odds since they met in the 2023 NCAA tournament final in which Reese’s LSU squad beat Clark’s Hawkeyes. Clark was the No. 1 pick in the 2024 draft; Reese was No. 7.

 

The Fever and Sky will play five times during the regular season. Their next matchup is June 7 at the United Center in Chicago.

 

Indiana’s Stephanie White, starting her second stint coaching the Fever, said she was happy with how well her team played defensively and the chemistry it showed before and after the incident involving Reese and Clark.

 

“Nobody’s going to get anything easy against us; we’re going to be a tough defensive team,” White said. “I thought it was a clear play on the ball, as well. One of the points of emphasis for us is we can’t give up ‘and-1s.’ So, you’re going to feel us.

 

“I am proud of this group. We have a lot of young players; we have a lot of veterans. And understanding moments where we have opportunities to grow from a mental toughness standpoint, from an execution standpoint … I felt that was a moment where we came together and we used that to propel us.”

 

One of the Fever’s veterans is Bonner, who is new this season to Indiana but is in her 16th year in the WNBA. Bonner scored seven points Saturday and moved into third place all time in the league in scoring (7,489), behind retired standout Diana Taurasi (10,646) and the Connecticut Sun’s Tina Charles (7,696).

 

Bonner and the Seattle Storm’s Alysha Clark are the oldest active players in the WNBA at 37. Bonner said the atmosphere in the arena on Saturday and the embrace of the Fever fans made it special for her, along with her twin daughters being at the game.

 

“Definitely a perfect opening day,” said Bonner, who signed with Indiana as a free agent after previously playing with the Sun and the Phoenix Mercury, with whom she won WNBA championships with Taurasi in 2009 and 2014. “To play in front of that crowd … when I walked out, I was just like, ‘Oh, my god.’ I think I was a little shell-shocked. I’m just honored.

 

“I always say I played with the greatest of all time in Diana. I had the blueprint on how to stay in this league; she did it for 20 years.”

 

Clark is in just her second season and fellow No. 1 pick Boston is in her third. But the two have helped turn around the franchise. They combined with guard Kelsey Mitchell last year to get the Fever back in the playoffs for the first time since 2016, which aided the team in luring free agents Bonner and Natasha Howard, who had 15 points Saturday along with Mitchell’s 15.

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“This is a great first win, but we have 43 more games to go,” Boston said. “So for us, it’s just about making sure that we lock in, rewatch the game, look at what we need to work on.”

The WNBA said Sunday that it is looking into allegations of “hateful fan comments” directed at Angel Reese during Saturday’s game between the Chicago Sky and Indiana Fever in Indianapolis after an incident involving Caitlin Clark and Reese.

 

“The WNBA strongly condemns racism, hate, and discrimination in all forms — they have no place in our league or in society,” the league said in a statement. “We are aware of the allegations and are looking into the matter.”

 

In the third quarter of Indiana’s 93-58 win over Chicago, Clark slapped at the ball after Reese grabbed an offensive rebound and had a clear path to the basket. Reese fell to the court, got back up and tried to confront Clark. Fever forward Aliyah Boston got between them. Clark’s foul was upgraded to a flagrant 1, and Reese and Boston were assessed technical fouls.

 

Reese was booed by fans at Gainbridge Fieldhouse throughout the game, but the volume increased during her ensuing foul shots.

 

Reese declined to comment Sunday through a representative.We believe that basketball can be a unifying force — a place where people from all walks of life come together not just to watch a game, but to connect,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement last week. “We want our arenas, and our social platforms filled with energy and fandom — not hate and vitriol.”

 

The Fever said they are cooperating with the league’s investigation.

 

“We are aware of the allegations of inappropriate fan conduct during yesterday’s game and we are working closely with the WNBA to complete their investigation,” Pacers Sports & Entertainment CEO Mel Raines said in a statement. “We stand firm in our commitment to providing a safe environment for all WNBA players.”

 

Following the game, Reese and Clark downplayed the incident between them.

 

“Basketball play,” Reese said. “Refs got it right. Move on.”

 

“Let’s not make it something that it’s not,” Clark said. “It was just a good play on the basketball. I’m not sure what the ref saw to upgrade it, and that’s up to their discretion. It’s a take foul to put them at the free throw line. I’ve watched a lot of basketball in my life; that’s exactly what it was. I wasn’t trying to do anything malicious. That’s not the type of player I am

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