NEW YORK — Oh, you thought going to a WNBA basketball game might be an escape from the arguments and polarization that are so common in American life these days? Ha, good one.
Some of the atmosphere in the public and media that has swirled around the professional women’s league since the season started last month has been less fun time and more culture war, with rookie Caitlin Clark as the unwilling eye of the storm.
The 22-year-old University of Iowa college standout and No. 1 draft pick, who is White, has become a canvas for all sorts of projections in her debut season with the Indiana Fever. She, and the predominantly Black and Brown women playing in the league alongside her, seem to have become the latest proxies for longstanding American issues from race, gender and sexual orientation to who gets to take (or is thrust into) the spotlight and who gets ignored.
That shouldn’t really surprise anyone, says Sarah Fields, professor of communication at the University of Colorado Denver, who studies the intersection of sports and American culture. “Sport,” she says, “is a microcosm (that) reflects and refracts society.”
Clark has had the fortune of entering the scene at a time when women’s sports, at both the collegiate and professional levels, are seeing increasing interest and engagement from the public. The sponsorship money started coming for her in college, thanks to name, image and likeness opportunities, and she just recently signed a signature sneaker deal with Nike.
But this is America, where people who may have been flying under the radar or are known only to a smaller community can garner widespread public attention and celebrity almost overnight — and all of a sudden, everyone’s got thoughts and opinions to offer.
In some corners of the internet and among some of the (predominantly male) sports punditocracy, Clark is being talked about as if she is THE reason the almost-30-year-old WNBA is FINALLY interesting enough to watch, and that the other players should keep that in mind and basically be “nice” to her, as if she needs to be protected.
The focus on Clark, as Black and Brown women are relegated to supporting roles is troubling, said Frederick Gooding Jr., an associate professor of African American studies at Texas Christian University.
“It’s not so much about the visibility of Clark,” he says. “It also speaks to the invisibility of Black females and how difficult it is for Black females to obtain that same type” of attention.
There’s been chatter that the veterans of the league are merely jealous of her spotlight, that she’s unfairly bearing the brunt of overly physical play like when Chennedy Carter of the Chicago Sky knocked her down, which was later deemed a flagrant foul. Rough plays against other players, like when Reese was clotheslined by Alyssa Thomas of the Connecticut Sun, doesn’t get nearly the same attention.
When Clark wasn’t picked last week for the U.S. women’s Olympic basketball team as a rookie, the outrage was vocal from some, who chastised the move as being short-sighted for not seeing the marketing opportunity.
“How dare you make this decision?” sports commentator Stephen A. Smith asked on ESPN’s “First Take.” “It’s stupid.”
Some of the commentary, especially online, was overtly racial, taking the stance that Clark was being discriminated against in the WNBA and in the Olympics selection because she is White and many of the other players are Black. (There are White players on the Olympics roster, a veteran squad in search of its eighth straight Olympic gold against tough international competition.)
On the flip side, there are critiques that the spotlight on Clark is in part because she’s White.
That WNBA teams are now using chartered flights instead of commercial ones comes after years of advocacy from players, but the timing of the league’s announcement this season was taken by some as a reflection on Clark’s presence.
“It’s like, OK, can we talk about the decades that Black women in the sport have been advocating for these and not just say that it’s about this one White woman in this one moment now? Because it’s not,” says Letisha Engracia Cardoso Brown, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Cincinnati. “Especially in a sport that’s dominated by women of color, by LGBTQ+ individuals as well, to kind of center our attention on this straight White woman is just — I mean, it’s par for the course.”
To be clear, none of this was started or even encouraged by Clark, who has tried to keep her public commentary to the game itself.
But last week she finally weighed in on some of the more controversial comments and hot takes aimed at making her a symbol for race relations in the country, saying it was “disappointing” and “not acceptable” that people would be using her to promote their own agendas.
“This league is the league I grew up admiring and wanting to be a part of. Some of the women in this league were my biggest idols and role models growing up,” she said. “Treating every single woman in this league with the same amount of respect is a basic human thing that everybody should do.”
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