Tag: WNBA

  • Brittney Griner exits: WNBA star found threatening note ahead of speech

    Brittney Griner exits: WNBA star found threatening note ahead of speech

    Brittney Griner, a 10-time WNBA All-Star, was a no-show for a speaking engagement she was booked for just outside of Washington, D.C. 

    The Atlanta Dream center’s decision stemmed from a note she discovered near the entrance to her hotel room in National Harbor, Maryland. Griner was scheduled to speak at the Women Grow Leadership Summit on Feb. 17. But, event organizers informed attendees that Griner pulled out after she saw “threatening objects and words” outside her hotel room.

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    Oct 29, 2024; Phoenix, Ariz, U.S.; WNBA player Brittney Griner joins Poder Latinx to promote “Cabalgata to the Polls”, a horseback riding event and live Banda music to celebrate National Vote Early Day. (Joe Rondone/The Republic/USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

    The note in question contained the words “Gay Baby Jail,” WUSA 9 reported. The words appeared to be written on a piece of duct tape.

    The Prince George’s County Police Department confirmed the launch of an investigation at Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center, the site of the conference.

    2025 WNBA DRAFT NO. 1 PICK ODDS: PAIGE BUECKERS HEAVILY FAVORED

    “Detectives have learned the phrase ‘gay baby jail’ is commonly used as a video game reference,” a statement from police obtained by TMZ Sports read. “At the time the tape was located, a large convention was taking place at the Gaylord which attracts thousands of people, many with an interest in anime as well as video game enthusiasts. At this time, detectives have uncovered no link to or threat against the guest who located the tape.”

    Brittney Griner with the flag

    Gold medallist Brittney Griner of United States holds the U.S. flag. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)

    Women Grow is an organization that brings women together with the goal of promoting leadership within the cannabis industry. Women Grow CEO Dr. Chanda Macias told WUSA9 that the hotel staff claimed the message was a cruel joke which a previous guest left, which was ultimately not removed by housekeeping.

    “I don’t know what their protocols are, but I don’t know why rooms wouldn’t be cleaned,” Macias said.

    Investigators did add that “detectives are working to determine who placed the piece of tape, when it was done and the intention behind it.”

    A 2013 interview with Sports Illustrated is believed to have marked the first time Griner pubically discussed her sexuality. During the interview, Griner was asked about the differences in public acceptance as it related to male athletes vs. female athletes revealing their sexuality.

    Brittney Griner WNBA game

    Phoenix Mercury center Brittney Griner pauses on the court during the second half of a WNBA basketball game against the Seattle Storm, Sept. 3, 2019, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

    “I really couldn’t give an answer on why that’s so different,” Griner told the outlet at the time. “Being one that’s out, it’s just being who you are. Again, like I said, just be who you are.” Griner added that she did not prioritize what others thought of her personal life.

    “Don’t worry about what other people are going to say, because they’re always going to say something, but, if you’re just true to yourself, let that shine through. Don’t hide who you really are,” she said.

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    Griner, a two-time WNBA Defensive Player of the Year, has been married to Cherelle Griner, since 2019. The couple welcomed their first child together in July 2024.

    Griner spent the first 11 seasons of her WNBA career with the Phoenix Mercury. She signed a contract with the Dream in January.

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  • Caitlin Clark contract: Agent says Fever star among WNBA players who need raise

    Caitlin Clark contract: Agent says Fever star among WNBA players who need raise

    Caitlin Clark immediately became a star as soon as she stepped onto the floor in an Indiana Fever jersey last year, despite naysayers believing it would take her a while to get up to speed.

    Clark’s salary became a talking point during her rookie season. Her rookie deal is worth just over $338,000 over four years with the annual average value being around $84,500, according to Spotrac. She earned around $76,000 in her first season and will earn around $78,000 for her second.

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    Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, #22, warms up before game one of the first round of the 2024 WNBA Playoffs at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut, on Sept. 22, 2024. (Mark Smith-Imagn Images)

    The Fever hold a club option on Clark’s contract for 2027, which at this point seems extremely likely they will pick up. By the 2028 offseason, she will become a restricted free agent.

    As Clark continues to grow as a player and increasingly make waves in the WNBA, she will be poised to set a record with whatever contract might come to her. A sports agent told ESPN in a story on Monday that it will be quite difficult for the sharpshooter to receive what she is actually worth.

    “Will Caitlin Clark ever be paid by the WNBA what she’s really worth to that league? I don’t think that’s possible,” Excel Sports Management’s Erin Kane told ESPN.

    NIKE UNVEILS CAITLIN CLARK BILLBOARD IN CITY WHERE ANGEL REESE’S TEAM IS BASED, INCITING MOCKERY FROM FANS

    Caitlin Clark at an NBA game

    Indiana Fever player Caitlin Clark looks on during the second half of the game between the Phoenix Suns and the Golden State Warriors at Footprint Center in Phoenix on Nov. 30, 2024. (Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images)

    “She’s part of a larger player body. They all need to be paid more. She should be recognized for what she has done and what she’s brought to the league from an economic standpoint. It’s as simple as that.”

    A supermax contract, under the WNBA’s current collective bargaining agreement (CBA), is worth nearly $242,000 and by the time Clark gets a chance to negotiate a new deal, the landscape could be changed.

    The Women’s National Basketball Players Association opted out of the current CBA last October with the possibility of work stoppage if a new deal is not reached by the end of the 2025 season.

    The union sought a deal that would increase player salaries, according to ESPN.

    Caitlin Clark drives

    Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, #22, rushes up the court during the game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis on Sunday, Sept. 15, 2024. (Grace Hollars/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

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    The league is set to increase the number of teams in play starting with the 2025 season. The Golden State Valkyries join the fold with the Toronto Tempo and a Portland team coming in 2026. The Sports Business Journal reported that the WNBA is set to add Cleveland as the next expansion team.

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  • Angel Reese set for LSU homecoming with WNBA preseason game

    Angel Reese set for LSU homecoming with WNBA preseason game

    Angel Reese will be back on her old stomping grounds later this year.

    As part of the WNBA preseason, Reese and her Chicago Sky will be headed to Baton Rogue to face the Brazilian National Team.

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    The game will take place at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center, where Reese spent two college seasons.

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    LSU Lady Tigers forward Angel Reese celebrates after defeating the Iowa Hawkeyes during the final round of the Women’s Final Four NCAA tournament at the American Airlines Center. (Kevin Jairaj-USA Today Sports)

    “It will be amazing to return to Baton Rouge, a community that means so much to me,” Reese said in a statement. “LSU was instrumental in preparing me for the WNBA, and I can’t wait to hit the court in front of both Tigers and Sky fans.”

    Reese made her mark in LSU lore after carrying the Tigers to the 2023 national championship over Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes. 

    “We are excited to host a WNBA game in May featuring the Chicago Sky and Angel Reese,” LSU coach Kim Mulkey said. “Angel played a major role in establishing our program at LSU, and I know our fans are going to be excited to have her back in the PMAC. She had such a great rookie season, and we can’t wait to continue to watch her thrive in the WNBA.”

    That title game featured Reese’s now-infamous taunt of Clark, which drew much criticism and started an unofficial rivalry between the two.

    Angel Reese points to her finger

    LSU’s Angel Reese reacts in front of Iowa’s Caitlin Clark during the second half of the NCAA Women’s Final Four championship basketball game Sunday, April 2, 2023, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    DEION SANDERS’ SON LIKENS HIMSELF TRUMP WHEN DISCUSSING PEOPLE WHO ‘ALWAYS JUST TRY TO DESTROY YOU’

    Clark dismissed any notion that Reese “should be criticized at all” after the fact, but the two have gone hand-in-hand in conversations surrounding women’s basketball, both on and off the floor.

    Reese’s teammate Kamilla Cardoso will go against her home national team. She was the third pick of the draft, behind Clark and Cameron Brink, after completing an undefeated season with South Carolina.

    “I am so excited to play against my former Brazilian national team,” Cardoso said. “Brazil has played such an important role in my life and has shaped the person I am today. Playing for the Sky against my former team gives me a wonderful opportunity to connect with my roots and play in front of old friends and teammates back home.”

    Angel Reese celebrates

    LSU’s Angel Reese celebrates after an NCAA Women’s Final Four semifinals basketball game against Virginia Tech on Friday, March 31, 2023, in Dallas.  (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

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    In her two seasons at LSU, Reese averaged 20.9 points and 14.4 rebounds and was twice a First-Team All-American.

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  • WNBA star who hurt Caitlin Clark’s eye calls for league to ‘take action’ against Trump administration policies

    WNBA star who hurt Caitlin Clark’s eye calls for league to ‘take action’ against Trump administration policies

    Connecticut Sun player DiJonai Carrington incited fierce backlash by wearing an anti-Trump shirt last weekend, and now she’s taking that message even further. 

    During a press conference before an “Unrivaled” league game Thursday, Carrington declared it’s time for WNBA players to “take action” in response to President Donald Trump’s policies.

    “We see that some of the policies are already going into action, and, of course, that means that as the WNBA and being at the forefront of a lot of these movements, it’s time for us to also take action,” Carrington said. 

    “It definitely needs to happen as women, women’s rights being taken away, like, now, LGBTQ rights being taken away now. They haven’t happened yet, but definitely in the works.”

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    DiJonai Carrington (21) of the Connecticut Sun dribbles during Game 2 of the first round of the WNBA playoffs against the Indiana Fever Sept. 25, 2024, at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

    Carrington wore a shirt that said, “The F— Donald Trump Tour” Friday while walking into Wayfair Arena in Miami, Florida.

    The player is most known for her interactions with women’s basketball phenom Caitlin Clark during Clark’s rookie WNBA season in 2024. 

    Carrington gave Clark a black eye after poking her during a game between Clark’s Indiana Fever and Carrington’s Connecticut Sun in the first round of the playoffs in September. Carrington laughed with Fever teammate Marina Mabrey after the incident.

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    Caitlin Clark keeps the ball away

    Connecticut Sun guard DiJonai Carrington (21) fouls Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) in the second half in Indianapolis Aug. 28, 2024.  (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

    Carrington has said she didn’t intentionally poke Clark in the eye and that she wasn’t laughing about the incident. However, she made light of the controversy over Clark’s black eye in an Instagram Live video in October. 

    In the video, Carrington and her girlfriend, NaLyssa Smith, who plays on the Indiana Fever with Clark, were in their kitchen when Smith poked Carrington in the eye.

    “Ow, you poked me in the eye,” Carrington said. Smith apologized, and the two laughed.

    “Did you do it on purpose?” Carrington asked.

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    Marina Mabrey and DiJonnai Carrington

    Connecticut Sun guards Marina Mabrey (4) and DiJonai Carrington (21) celebrate during the second half of a first-round WNBA basketball playoff game against the Indiana Fever Sept. 25, 2024, in Uncasville, Conn.  (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

    Carrington provoked Clark fans prior to the eye-poking incident with multiple statements berating Clark and her fan base. 

    During a game in June, Carrington fouled Clark after Clark received an inbound pass from teammate Kristy Wallace. Clark caught the pass and started toward the basket. Carrington was late getting to Clark due to a screen by Aliyah Boston, and she bumped into Clark.

    Later that month, Carrington posted on X, saying Clark should do more to speak out about people using her name for “racism” and other forms of prejudice. She also called the Fever fans the “nastiest” in the league.

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  • WNBA star Caitlin Clark details ‘incredible’ experience alongside Taylor Swift at Chiefs’ playoff game

    WNBA star Caitlin Clark details ‘incredible’ experience alongside Taylor Swift at Chiefs’ playoff game

    Caitlin Clark, the reigning WNBA Rookie of the Year, shared some details about her experience attending an NFL postseason game with Taylor Swift.

    Clark sat beside Swift in a luxury suite at Arrowhead Stadium, the home of the Kansas City Chiefs, Jan. 18. The star duo chatted and hugged at times as the Chiefs took on the Houston Texans.

    During a recent appearance on a podcast, Clark confirmed she supports the Chiefs and praised Swift’s kindness.

    “I’m a huge Chiefs fan, and Taylor is a huge Chiefs fan,” Caitlin told the “Swarmcast” podcast. “Taylor is very sweet and very kind, and it’s a good reminder that people in our position are very normal. We enjoy watching sports and hanging out with our friends. It puts a great perspective on life.”

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    Singer-songwriter Taylor Swift talks with Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever during the second half of an AFC divisional playoff between the Houston Texans and the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium Jan. 18, 2025 in Kansas City, Mo.  (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    Since last season, Swift has made frequent appearances at Chiefs games in support of the team and star tight end Travis Kelce.

    Clark further raved about her and Swift’s shared fondness for the Chiefs. 

    “It’s just cute to see how excited she is for the Chiefs and getting to share that. I was like, ‘Oh my God, she loves this. She loves the Chiefs as much as me, This is incredible,’” Clark said. 

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    Clark said the meeting between the Chiefs and Texans ended up being “a perfect game.”

    “We had so much fun, and, honestly, it was the perfect game. The Chiefs won. It was close at halftime. Travis scores a huge touchdown for the Chiefs. We ended up winning,” the Indiana Fever star added. “There was nothing crazy that happened, and we felt confident as it got to the end. It ended up being a perfect game.”

    Taylor Swift talks with Caitlin Clark

    Singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, left, talks with Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever during the second half of an AFC divisional playoff between the Houston Texans and the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium Jan. 18, 2025, in Kansas City, Mo.  (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

    Clark’s surprise appearance at the game captured the attention of the sports world. After noticing Clark was attending the game alongside Swift, longtime sports commentator Skip Bayless shared his thoughts on the duo.

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    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    Bayless argued Clark did not “need to be seen with her.” 

    Bayless, who hosts a weekly podcast, posted a video to his social media platform as he addressed Clark’s decision to attend the game with the music star. 

    “Can somebody tell me what possessed Caitlin Clark to associate with Taylor Swift?” he asked.

    Swift was on hand Sunday to watch the Chiefs defeat the Buffalo Bills in the AFC championship. The Chiefs will take on the NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles in the Super Bowl Feb. 9 in New Orleans.

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  • Riley Gaines tears into WNBA star who gave Caitlin Clark black eye for wearing anti-Trump shirt

    Riley Gaines tears into WNBA star who gave Caitlin Clark black eye for wearing anti-Trump shirt

    WNBA player DiJonai Carrington invited a flurry of backlash for wearing a shirt that said “The F— Donald Trump Tour,” and conservative influencer Riley Gaines was quick to jump in. 

    Carrington showed off the shirt Friday, while walking into Wayfair Arena in Miami, Florida. Carrington is most known for her interactions with women’s basketball phenom Caitlin Clark during Clark’s rookie WNBA season in 2024. 

    Carrington infamously gave Clark a black eye by poking her with her fingernails during a game between Clark’s Indiana Fever and Carrington’s Connecticut Sun in the first round of the playoffs in September. Carrington laughed with Fever teammate Marina Mabrey after the incident.

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    Gaines made light of this in her first critique of Carrington Saturday. 

    “So, you’re telling me the same girl who deliberately gouged Caitlin Clark in the eye then laughed about it also wore a hoodie that said, “The F— Donald Trump Tour”?! I’m shocked,” Gaines wrote in a post on X. 

    Carrington has said she didn’t intentionally poke Clark in the eye and that she wasn’t laughing about the incident. But Gaines felt no reservations about implying Carrington’s poke at Clark was intentional and that she laughed about it afterward.

    Gaines followed up with another critique of the Sun player and even brought LeBron James into the conversation. 

    “What has Donald Trump done to make your life worse? Keep LeBron off the court,” Gaines wrote on X in response to a photo of Carrington wearing the shirt. 

    Carrington provoked Clark fans prior to the eye-poking incident with multiple statements berating Clark and her fan base. 

    During a game in June, Carrington fouled Clark after Clark received an inbound pass from teammate Kristy Wallace. Clark caught the pass and started toward the basket. Carrington was late getting to Clark due to a screen by Aliyah Boston, and she bumped into Clark.

    Caitlin Clark, right, of the Indiana Fever, fouls DiJonai Carrington (21) of the Connecticut Sun during the first half at the Mohegan Sun Arena June 10, 2024, in Uncasville, Conn. (Brian Fluharty/Getty Images)

    Later that month, Carrington posted on X, saying Clark should do more to speak out about people using her name for “racism” and other forms of prejudice. She also called the Fever fans the “nastiest” in the league.

    Carrington even made light of the controversy over Clark’s black eye in an Instagram Live video in October. In the video, Carrington and her girlfriend, NaLyssa Smith, who plays on the Indiana Fever with Clark, were in their kitchen when Smith poked Carrington in the eye.

    “Ow, you poked me in the eye,” Carrington said. Smith apologized, and the two laughed.

    “Did you do it on purpose?” Carrington asked.

    Carrington isn’t the first target of Gaines’ wrath when it comes to conversations about Clark’s presence in the WNBA either. 

    After Clark made a comment about benefiting from White privilege in the WNBA during her interview for Time magazine Athlete of The Year, Gaines got into a heated back-and-forth with journalist Jemele Hill. 

    After Gaines posted on X criticizing Clark for making the comments, Hill started the debate and even ended up making it personal. 

    “You holler all the time about supporting and ‘protecting’ women, and yet the moment that Caitlin Clark expresses appreciation and respect for the Black women in the WNBA (many of whom she grew up watching and idolizing), suddenly you’re acting like a disappointed parent,” Hill wrote. 

    RILEY GAINES REPEATEDLY TEARS INTO AOC FOR TAKING PRONOUNS OUT OF X BIO AFTER ADVOCATING FOR TRANS ATHLETES

    Riley Gaines testifying

    Riley Gaines is sworn in during a House Oversight Subcommittee on Health Care and Financial Services hearing on Capitol Hill Dec. 5, 2023, in Washington, D.C. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

    Gaines quickly clapped back, responding to Hill’s post by mocking the idea of “White privilege” in the WNBA. 

    “‘White privilege’ in the WNBA is literally hilarious. Maybe you’re like Sunny Hostin & think CC also has tall privilege, pretty privilege, and straight privilege,” Gaines wrote. “Theres lots of Black players in the WNBA I love [and] respect too, but I don’t admire them because they’re Black. I admire them for their game. That’s the difference.” 

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    Gaines then doubled down by sharing Hill’s initial post with a screenshot of comments the journalist made in an interview with the Los Angeles Times in May. In that article, Hill insisted it was “naive” to say Clark’s race and sexuality as a straight woman did not play into her popularity in the WNBA, where the majority of players are Black and many are lesbian. 

    “Being a long-standing professional race baiter must be SO exhausting,” Gaines told Hill in response. 

    After Gaines’ comment about Hill being a professional race baiter, Hill responded with a message mocking the former swimmer for an incident when she tied with trans athlete Lia Thomas at the 2022 NCAA women’s swimming championships.

    “Girl, you need to thank Lia Thomas every day of your life for helping you get famous, otherwise you would have been just a decent college swimmer that no one knew. You wrote the book on grifting — not me,” Hill wrote.

    Trump Gaines CPAC

    Former President Donald Trump is joined onstage by Riley Gaines at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Dallas, Texas, Aug. 6, 2022.  (Reuters/Brian Snyder)

    Gaines responded by saying, “How deeply regressive [and] utterly misogynistic for Jemele Hill to tell me to thank a man for the platform I have. Thank him for what? Violating us in the locker room? Stealing a national title from a deserving woman? Indirectly stripping us of our 1A rights? Just say you hate women,” Gaines wrote in her response.

    That was the last message in the exchange. 

    Gaines has also picked online fights with other liberal figures, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Dallas Mavericks minority owner Mark Cuban. 

    Each of Gaines’ spats with the liberal figures has been met with roaring engagement from her followers. 

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  • WNBA star DiJonai Carrington flaunts explicit message on pre-game outfit directed at President Trump

    WNBA star DiJonai Carrington flaunts explicit message on pre-game outfit directed at President Trump

    WNBA star DiJonai Carrington sparked some controversy before her Friday night Unrivaled game due to her pre-game outfit selection.

    Carrington was spotted walking into Wayfair Arena in Miami, Florida, wearing a sweatshirt with rapper YG on the front with the name of his old 2016 tour: “The F—Donald Trump Tour.”

    The message, written in red letters with the rapper in the background flipping the middle finger, was clear as Carrington stopped to pose for a photo. 

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    DiJonai Carrington, #21 of the Connecticut Sun, brings the ball up court in the second quarter against the Chicago Sky at Mohegan Sun Arena on September 19, 2024, in Uncasville, Connecticut.  (Mike Lawrie/Getty Images)

    Carrington, whose X page around the election showed pro-Kamala Harris messaging, appears to make it clear how she feels about President Trump with her outfit choice.

    Carrington is a part of the new 3-on-3 Unrivaled league, playing for the Mist, which is one of six clubs within the organization co-founded by fellow WNBA stars Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier. 

    DIJONAI CARRINGTON, CAITLIN CLARK’S TEAMMATE APPEAR TO JOKE ABOUT INFAMOUS EYE-POKING INCIDENT

    Carrington was named the WNBA’s Most Improved Player during the 2024 season, receiving 28 of the 67 votes from a national media panel after posting career highs in points (12.7), rebounds (5.0) and assists (1.6).

    But the 2024 season didn’t come without some controversy on the court for Carrington, who was accused of purposefully poking Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, the WNBA’s new superstar and Rookie of the Year, in the eye during a game. 

    DiJonai Carrington drives toward hoop

    Connecticut Sun guard DiJonai Carrington (21) works around Minnesota Lynx guard Courtney Williams (10) during the second half of game two of the 2024 WNBA Semi-finals at Target Center. (Matt Krohn-Imagn Images)

    Carrington pleaded her innocence after the incident. 

    “I don’t even know why I would intent to hit anybody in the eye,” she said. “That doesn’t even make sense to me.”

    Clark also downplayed the situation when asked about, saying it “wasn’t intentional by any means.”

    Carrington was already not in the good graces of Fever fans, as she provoked them by posting a tweet in late August, which read, “the Indiana fever have the nastiest fans in the W. ew.” The eye-poking incident occurred during Game 1 of the WNBA playoffs match-up between Carrington’s Connecticut Sun and Clark’s Fever.

    DiJonai Carrington warms up

    Connecticut Sun guard DiJonai Carrington (21) warms up before the start of game four of the 2024 WNBA Semi-finals against the Minnesota Lynx at Mohegan Sun Arena.  (David Butler II-Imagn Images)

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    Carrington’s girlfriend, NaLyssa Smith, whom she met after transferring to Baylor, plays alongside Clark on the Fever. 

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