Caitlin Clark & Napheesa Collier to Lead WNBA All-Star Rosters

She’s heating up—again. Caitlin Clark, the rookie sensation who has taken the WNBA by storm, returned from a five-game absence and immediately reminded everyone why she’s the biggest story in women’s basketball today. In a dazzling performance, Clark knocked down threes from 27, 31, even 33 feet, piling up 32 points, nine assists, and eight rebounds in a single game. She scored or assisted on 50 points, already marking her ninth such game—just one behind Diana Taurasi’s all-time record, which Taurasi set after 565 games. Clark has played just 45.

But as Clark continues to rewrite the record books and draw millions of new eyes to the league, her meteoric rise has also exposed some of the uglier truths about the WNBA—truths that go beyond the box score. “Let’s call a spade a spade,” the commentator says bluntly. “Racism has been impacting the WNBA well before this year. This is not a new thing.” He argues that Clark, a white woman excelling in a league long dominated by Black women, is being used as a “pawn” in a culture war she never asked for.

The numbers don’t lie. Since Clark entered the league, WNBA TV ratings have soared 300%. Her games average 1.2 million viewers, with her recent return peaking at 2.8 million—one of the highest ever for a regular season game. The Indiana Fever’s franchise value has skyrocketed from $90 million to $340 million. Clark is responsible for an estimated 26% of all WNBA economic activity, and is expected to help drive league revenues to nearly a billion dollars next year. “Pay this woman,” the commentator insists. “If anyone deserves to get paid like the men, it’s Caitlin Clark.”

Yet, for all her success, Clark has become a lightning rod for controversy—much of it, the host claims, rooted in race and identity politics within the league. He points out that the WNBA has historically celebrated players who fit a certain mold: Black, masculine-presenting, often openly lesbian. Clark, by contrast, is feminine, not Black, and doesn’t fit the established narrative. “She’s everything they said you couldn’t be and still be successful,” the host says. “That’s why they hate her. That’s why they don’t know why they don’t like her.”

He goes further, suggesting that if Clark were Black and openly gay, she’d be celebrated as “Mother Mary, maybe even Jesus Christ incarnated.” Instead, she faces resentment and skepticism, not just from fans, but from within the league itself. “They want their poster child to be someone else—a ‘ghetto superstar’ like Angel Reese. But it’s Clark who’s hitting threes, acting professional, and drawing in the crowds.”

The commentary also touches on the toxic online discourse surrounding Clark. Rumors and accusations swirl—did someone call her an “effing white girl” during a viral moment? Clark herself denies it, saying she would never use that language, but the incident underscores how quickly the conversation around her veers away from basketball and into the fraught territory of race, gender, and sexuality.

This, the host argues, is nothing new for the WNBA. “We’ve been trying to tell you for so long,” a former player says. “Nobody ever let us just be valued for our basketball play.” The league’s history is one of fighting for respect, visibility, and fair pay, often in the face of indifference or outright hostility. Now, with Clark’s arrival, those old tensions are being exposed in new ways.

WNBA, not solely Caitlin Clark, the 'real breakthrough star' of 2024, '60  Minutes' journalist claims | Fox News

Despite the noise, Clark remains focused on the game. After her latest performance, she praised her teammates and emphasized the Fever’s unselfish, uptempo style. “That’s how the Fever are supposed to play basketball,” she said. “Really proud of our group.” For her, it’s about the work—on the court, in the gym, every single day.

But for those watching from the outside, it’s impossible to ignore the larger story. Clark’s unprecedented impact on the WNBA is undeniable. She’s breaking records, driving revenue, and bringing women’s basketball into the national spotlight like never before. And yet, her presence has also become a flashpoint in ongoing debates about race, gender, and who gets to be the face of a league struggling to define itself.

“Stop playing with this girl,” the commentator says, exasperated. “You cannot deny her success.” The WNBA, he argues, needs to recognize what it has in Clark—a once-in-a-generation talent whose influence goes far beyond the stat sheet. As the league hurtles toward a billion-dollar future, the question is whether it can embrace the change she represents—or whether old prejudices will continue to hold it back.