
The Draft Night Disaster: How Hailey Van Lith Went From WNBA Darling to PR Nightmare in 60 Seconds
The 2025 WNBA Draft was supposed to be Hailey Van Lith’s big night. The ESPN cameras were rolling, the crowd was buzzing at Hudson Yards, and Van Lith—picked 11th overall—looked set for superstardom.
But then she opened her mouth, and everything changed.
During a lighthearted “Start, Bench, Cut” segment, Van Lith was asked to choose between Diana Taurasi, Sabrina Ionescu, and Caitlin Clark. Most rookies would dodge controversy. Not Hailey.
“I’d start Diana, bench Sabrina… and cut Caitlin,” she said, cool as ice.
The room? Dead silent. Social media? Exploded.
Ten minutes later, #CutCaitlin was everywhere. In half an hour, #HaileyOut was trending even harder.
Sponsors Bail—Fast
It didn’t take long for the fallout to hit Hailey’s bank account. Within 72 hours, two major sponsors pressed pause. GatorEdge yanked all ads featuring Van Lith—some already in the can. FootRun Apparel shelved a hyped sneaker collab, indefinitely.
“She went from franchise face to PR hazard in under a minute,” one brand manager told Total Pro Sports. “You don’t diss Caitlin Clark and expect to get away with it.”
One marketing analyst put Van Lith’s losses at $500,000—gone overnight.

Why Cutting Caitlin Was a Career Killer
Caitlin Clark isn’t just another rookie—she’s the WNBA’s ticket-selling, record-breaking, ratings-boosting machine. Her Indiana Fever games are sellouts. She’s smashing TV ratings. She’s single-handedly responsible for 25% of the league’s merch sales.
To “cut” Clark—even as a joke—wasn’t edgy. It was business suicide.
“She didn’t just insult a player,” a WNBA exec told TPS. “She insulted the league’s biggest asset.”
Clark’s Response? Silence—and Domination
While Van Lith’s comments went viral, Clark didn’t take the bait. No tweets. No drama. Just a sly smirk caught on camera—classic Clark.
When asked about the drama, Clark brushed it off: “I’m focused on helping my team win.” And then she did—dropping 28 points, 8 assists, and 5 boards in her first preseason game. Van Lith? Still fighting for minutes.
Locker Room Vibes: Support Fades Fast
Van Lith always had a reputation for being confident—maybe too confident. After the draft, that confidence looked a lot like arrogance. WNBA vets unfollowed her. A scout called her “a locker room variable.” Even Angel Reese, her old LSU teammate, stayed quiet.
Sue Bird weighed in, too: “There’s a difference between competitive edge and public ego. Fans know the difference.”
Brianna Turner Picks a Side
If you want proof Van Lith is losing the locker room, look at Brianna Turner. Once part of the Reese-Van Lith crew, Turner was spotted working out with—who else?—Caitlin Clark. The internet dubbed them “the real power duo.” Turner even praised Clark’s leadership on and off the court.
Reese? She posted a cryptic Instagram: “Loyalty hits different when it’s tested.”

Sponsors: No Thanks
A leaked FootRun report showed Van Lith’s audience sentiment nosedived—down 33% in a week. GatorEdge said they’re “reevaluating partnerships in alignment with our values.” Translation: No drama rookies allowed.
Clark’s Numbers: Brutal Comparison
Indiana Fever 2024 home attendance: 341,000+ (record)
Chicago Sky with Reese & Van Lith: zero sellouts at Wintrust Arena
Fever games moved to bigger arenas in six cities—including Chicago
Clark’s games are selling out. Van Lith’s? Not even close.
One Rookie Mistake, Veteran Consequences
Van Lith could’ve kept her head down, earned her spot, and let her game do the talking. Instead, she tried to start a rivalry with the league’s biggest star. Big mistake.
“She came in like she was the star,” a league insider told TPS. “She forgot the league already has one.”
The Ego Era Is Over
Women’s basketball is changing. The days of “main character syndrome” are done. Clark is all business—humble, relentless, lethal. While others talk, she trains. On her birthday? Clark went 50-for-54 from deep. No cameras. No drama. Just buckets.
Redemption or Ruin?
The Sky face the Fever in the season opener—already dubbed “The Redemption Game.” For Van Lith, it’s do-or-die. Every play will be under the microscope. One misstep, and the backlash returns. One great game, and maybe she gets a second chance.
But don’t count on it.
Final Take
Hailey Van Lith wanted to start a rivalry. Instead, she started a PR firestorm—and cut herself out of the WNBA’s golden story. While she scrambles to rebuild, Clark just keeps winning, filling arenas, and changing the game—one silent, unstoppable shot at a time.
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