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The Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese rhetoric is getting handled way too timidly by the WNBA

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JULY 20: WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert speaks to the media before the 2024 WNBA All Star Game at Footprint Center on July 20, 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JULY 20: WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert speaks to the media before the 2024 WNBA All Star Game at Footprint Center on July 20, 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert had a chance to do something that should have been done a long time ago — condemn the people who have used Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese's names to further their own agendas. Instead, she sidestepped the opportunity to use her platform, opting for the dollars instead.

Since the 2023 National Championship and into their rookie WNBA seasons, Clark and Reese have been at the center of some of the wildest vitriol women's sports have seen in recent years. Their stardom has galvanized an extremist movement of  "fans" whose only goal is to find the opportunities — the cracks — in the foundation of women's basketball and fill them with racial, sexist and bigoted sludge.

The narratives driven by "supporters" (and perpetuated by media personalities like Charles Barkley) have grown so loud and dangerous that Clark and Reese were forced to respond and reveal unhinged behavior like death threats and stalking. But the league has been publicly silent about what's happening. Recently, Engelbert gave a corporate, safe non-answer when allowed to denounce the rhetoric and refocus the conversation on basketball. Here's what she told CNBC:

The problem with that answer is that it ignores the elephant in the room.

It minimizes the ugly truth that a small but extremely loud and rapidly growing contingent of WNBA "fans" is dramatically shifting what the conversations should be about. Engelbert's answer also comes off as dismissive of the gravity of what is being spewed directly to both players, in the names of Caitlin and Angel and other WNBA players.

Earlier this season, Aliyah Boston had to delete her social media because the things said to her were well past basketball. A man tracked down Chennedy Carter and the Chicago Sky to reportedly hurl racist and misogynist marks after a hip-check foul. And those are only two examples.

Dozens more instances involve players, which only worsens when social media is involved. The internet has become a cesspool for people to operate unchecked, all behind the mask of WNBA fandom and free speech. Finding the right words to say on such topics is never easy, and it often requires more profound thought before speaking. But how much longer is this supposed to go on? How bad does it have to get before the league says something?

The WNBA has always been a socially-conscious league focused on being aware of things larger than basketball. However, it cannot turn a blind eye now because its bank account says it's not worth the fuss. Doing so is disingenuous to every player who has ever played in the league and any future athlete who will wear a WNBA jersey.

The plot has officially been lost when money trumps humanity, and the WNBA is dangerously close to completely fumbling Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese's impact.

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This article originally appeared on For The Win: The Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese rhetoric is getting handled way too timidly by the WNBA