Caitlin Clark, Jason Whitlock and Fever
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A couple of subpar games, and Caitlin Clark was already being shipped out from the Indiana Fever. On the back of a courtside spat between Stephanie White and Clark, Lakers legend and commentator Mychal Thompson started the rumors by tweeting that the Fever “don’t want Caitlin no more.
Rather than simply defend the claim, Whitlock escalated the exchange by invoking Dianna Russini, turning the conversation into a broader fight about sports media ethics.
A sports commentator looked to fuel a fake controversy between Caitlin Clark and Stephanie White, but WNBA fans blasted his theory.
Jason Whitlock escalated a social media spat with college basketball insider Jeff Goodman by calling him "the original Dianna Russini" after Goodman mocked Whitlock's unverified claim that the Indiana Fever plan to trade Caitlin Clark to the Los Angeles Sparks.
Former ESPN analyst Jason Whitlock drew attention on Saturday when he responded to Crissy Froyd for calling out the NFL media via an article in the Daily Mail.
Whitlock defended his Caitlin Clark to Los Angeles theory by comparing it to the NHL’s famous Wayne Gretzky move.
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"It's a charity designed to fund feminism" - Jason Whitlock slams WNBA as Caitlin Clark debate heats up
Jason Whitlock recently weighed in on Caitlin Clark’s foul frustration and turned the discussion toward the WNBA’s broader business model.
Victor Wembanyama's actions during the national anthem have become one of the biggest talking points of the NBA Finals.
