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January 1, WNBA Analyst Defends Violent Hit — Fans See Right Through It

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Wyatt’s Take

  • ESPN analyst blamed ‘optics’ and ‘social media narratives’ instead of calling out dangerous contact for what it was
  • Suggested America’s most popular player ’embellishes contact’ after taking a hand to the throat — complete disconnect from reality
  • WNBA media proves once again it’s more interested in protecting the old guard than protecting its biggest star

It takes some serious mental gymnastics to watch the WNBA suspend a player for striking someone in the throat and then argue the real problem was how it looked on camera.

But that’s exactly what happened this week.

When Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas hit Caitlin Clark in the throat last Wednesday, the league eventually corrected the officials’ on-court mistake. They upgraded the play to a Flagrant 2 and handed down a one-game suspension.

You’d think that would settle it. But some WNBA analysts went searching for ways to defend the contact anyway.

Former WNBA star and ESPN analyst Chiney Ogwumike delivered one of the most twisted defenses yet. On Sunday, she framed the whole incident as a story about officiating problems and social media overreaction.

Instead of calling out Thomas for dangerous play, Ogwumike suggested Clark herself might be part of the problem.

“This was a marquee matchup. When you look at Alyssa Thomas and Caitlin Clark, they’re both dominant players, but Alyssa plays on the edge. I know her, and Caitlin, at times, can embellish contact in certain situations.”

She kept going.

“Instead, the league found itself in a position where it had to be reactive. Rather than controlling the game through officiating, it ended up responding after the fact by doing something it rarely does, issuing a suspension for a non-call.”

Then came the real kicker.

“I’ll add one more thing. I think that largely happened because of the optics. Watching the play live, in real time, I didn’t think much of it because players hit the floor all the time. But once narratives started forming around a freeze-frame image, that changed everything. I do think the league was reacting to the optics of that image.”

Fans on social media weren’t buying it. The backlash was immediate.

“And this is why nobody respects Chiney’s opinion on ball,” one fan fired back.

Another wrote: “Wrong. The league made the right call. Chiney has always hated Caitlin and pushes false narratives. This is a PR clean up for AT and no one is buying it.”

One more summed it up perfectly: “So did Caitlin embellish getting a hand to the neck? I’m lost here.”

By calling a play that earned a suspension an “optics problem,” Ogwumike shifted attention away from what Thomas actually did. She turned it into a conversation about freeze frames and social media instead of player safety and accountability.

Physical play against Clark keeps getting framed as something she just needs to accept. Officials are expected to let it go, and when they don’t, the media suggests the league overreacted.

Comments like Ogwumike’s only make that worse. They send a message: protecting enforcers matters more than protecting the league’s biggest draw.

If fans decide the WNBA and its media are more interested in excusing cheap shots than calling them out, don’t be shocked when viewership starts heading the other direction.

Wyatt Matters

This isn’t about basketball anymore — it’s about basic fairness. When the people paid to analyze the game can’t be honest about what happened right in front of them, fans notice. Middle America doesn’t have patience for spin and excuse-making. They want straight talk and equal treatment. The WNBA built its recent surge on Caitlin Clark’s star power, and if the league’s own voices keep undermining her, those new fans won’t stick around long.

8 Comments

  1. Pat Taggart

    June 29, 2026 at 8:11 am

    You’re so right. If it weren’t for Caitlyn Clark most of of us wouldn’t even be watching the WNBA. They need to get this under control or we’re gonna stop watching. Most of.Caitlins injuries have come from no calls and allowing the game to get out of control. Even NBA players are saying they allow too much violent play. This is the second year that this same kind of play has been going on. Maybe Katelyn oughta go into the European league and then none of us would watch the WNBA anymore

  2. Frank Roselli

    June 29, 2026 at 8:34 am

    I still think the woman’s game can be officiated a whole lot better… Caitlyn Clark has been taking a pounding, and has even been injured, you would think the players jersey most sought after and sold would require better

  3. jose jimenez

    June 29, 2026 at 8:46 am

    Half of this I blame on her teammates. If, when something like this happens, they would immediately proceed to pound the livin crap out of the offender, the rest of the opposing team and the idiot officials might start paying attention and doing what is proper and correct. So they end up paying fines or are suspended for a game or two. It might keep Caitlyn from some future serious injury and supporting a teammate is supposedly what “teams” are about.

    • Greg Esford

      June 29, 2026 at 6:44 pm

      A man brother ur exactly right!!!

  4. Jon

    June 29, 2026 at 9:27 am

    As far as chimpy her opinion means nothing just another race baiting bigot

  5. H Lee

    June 29, 2026 at 10:07 am

    The coaches are a miserable, rotten, virtue-less sorry lot who permit their barbarin savages to play this rough and likely also encourage it. Why go to one of these games and watch these hate mongering cheaters play and then leave annoyed and mad because of these virtue-less coaches?

  6. Jack

    June 29, 2026 at 10:36 am

    The NBA should pull their financial support from the wnba and see how long the league can survive. Hurting opposing players intentionally should be a minimum 10 game suspension without pay. Second offense is termination. Fans come to watch a competitive sporting event, not wild animals causing injuries to win.
    Coaching needs to get a grip on this issue before the few fans you have no longer want to see a game.

    • Jon

      June 29, 2026 at 6:16 pm

      Truth

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8 Comments


Wyatt Porter is a seasoned writer and constitutional scholar who brings a rugged authenticity and deep-seated patriotism to his work. Born and raised in small-town America, Wyatt grew up on a farm, where he learned the value of hard work and the pride that comes from it. As a conservative voice, he writes with the insight of a historian and the grit of a lifelong laborer, blending logic with a sharp wit. Wyatt’s work captures the struggles and triumphs of everyday Americans, offering readers a fresh perspective grounded in traditional values, individual freedom, and an unwavering love for his country.




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