logo
'Angel Reese Is Not Selling Out Arenas in Chicago': Caitlin Clark Book Author Gets Blunt

'Angel Reese Is Not Selling Out Arenas in Chicago': Caitlin Clark Book Author Gets Blunt

Yahoo2 days ago
'Angel Reese Is Not Selling Out Arenas in Chicago': Caitlin Clark Book Author Gets Blunt originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
In the wake of record-breaking attendance and escalating TV ratings midway through the WNBA's 2025 season, two of the league's brightest stars, Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark and Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese, find themselves at the center of a heated debate about who truly drives the business of women's basketball.
This past weekend's WNBA All-Star festivities in Indiana drew an average of 2.2 million viewers for the game itself, down 36% from last year's 3.44 million when Clark took the court, but the Skills Challenge and 3-Point Contest still averaged 1.3 million viewers, a near 90% jump from 2024.
League officials point to the spike in ancillary events as further proof of growing fan engagement, yet the nearly 1.24 million-viewer drop when Clark was sidelined underscores her outsized impact on viewership and ticket demand.
On Monday, veteran sports journalist Christine Brennan joined "The Robin Lundberg Show" on YouTube to discuss her new biography "On Her Game: Caitlin Clark and the Revolution in Women's Sports."
Mid-conversation, Brennan asserted that while Angel Reese is an "incredible rebounder" and "a powerful motor," she "is not selling out arenas in Chicago; Caitlin Clark is. Angel needs Caitlin to sell out. These are facts."
Since being selected first overall in the 2024 WNBA Draft by the Indiana Fever, Clark has electrified arenas and airwaves alike.
On the court, she set the WNBA single-season rookie record for points, assists and 3-pointers made, became the ninth rookie to be named an All-Star starter and was named Eastern Conference Player of the Week three times and Rookie of the Month four times.
Off the court, Clark's impact has been equally seismic: her first season drew over half a million fans to Fever games, more than the combined total of several franchises, and her recent departure due to injury prompted a notable dip in attendance and TV viewership.
Clark's burgeoning brand has also attracted major corporate backers.
In a deal reportedly worth up to $28 million over eight years, per The Wall Street Journal, she became a cornerstone athlete for Nike's WNBA initiatives, a partnership that extends beyond footwear into collaborative marketing campaigns.
She also holds endorsements with Wilson, State Farm, Gatorade, Bose and other national brands, underscoring her role as a new face of women's basketball at a time when the league is negotiating historic broadcast rights.
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 28, 2025, where it first appeared.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘It's super disrespectful': WNBA players exasperated after sex toy thrown onto court for second time in a week
‘It's super disrespectful': WNBA players exasperated after sex toy thrown onto court for second time in a week

CNN

time9 minutes ago

  • CNN

‘It's super disrespectful': WNBA players exasperated after sex toy thrown onto court for second time in a week

WNBA players have spoken out after a second game this week was delayed due to a sex toy being thrown onto the court. In the third quarter of the Golden State Valkyries' 73-66 win over the Chicago Sky on Friday night, the bright green toy was thrown from the stands at Wintrust Arena in Chicago and landed just out of bounds underneath one of the baskets. With the Sky on the attack, the game was halted and an official kicked the object to the side, where it was picked up with a towel and removed. 'It's super disrespectful,' Sky center Elizabeth Williams told reporters afterward. 'I don't really get the point of it. It's really immature. Whoever's doing it just needs to grow up.' The incident came just three days after another sex toy was thrown onto the court during the Valkyries' 77-75 victory over the Atlanta Dream at Gateway Center Arena in College Park, Georgia. Following Friday's reoccurrence, a number of players from around the WNBA took to social media to comment on the incidents. 'ARENA SECURITY?! Hello??!' wrote New York Liberty forward Isabelle Harrison wrote on X. 'Please do better. It's not funny. never was funny. Throwing ANYTHING on the court is so dangerous.' Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham echoed Harrison's anger, writing: 'Stop throwing dildos on the court… you're going to hurt one of us.' CNN has contacted the WNBA for comment.

2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams
2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams

USA Today

time11 minutes ago

  • USA Today

2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams

The calendar has flipped to August, which means we've officially hit the low point of the NBA calendar. The next couple of months are the driest part of the year. Everybody has headed to vacation and awaits training camp to kick off the 2025-26 season. The Oklahoma City Thunder continue to enjoy their NBA championship. They had a historic 68-14 regular-season campaign that eventually led to the franchise's first title with a 2025 NBA Finals Game 7 win. They'll enter next season as a favorite to be a rare repeat winner. To reflect on their title run, Thunder Wire will conduct 2024-25 season grades for all 19 players who suited up for the squad at one point during the year. Second up is Jalen Williams, who had a career season with first-time All-Star and All-NBA honors: 2024-25 statistics: Advanced stats: Significant Percentile Finishes: Contract: Thoughts: Reminding folks he played through a broken wrist throughout the playoffs every other day on social media, Williams has earned the right to run as many victory laps as he wants this summer. The 24-year-old answered any questions and criticisms with a stern hush. After wondering if Williams is good enough to be the second-best player on a title contender, he shut down any doubters with a career season. Juggling injuries all regular season, it was him who was one of the Thunder's most consistent threats that helped them reach 68 wins. A player's third season is when you typically see a breakout. If they have a major leap in them, that's when they usually make it. Williams jumped young player with potential to a first-time All-Star and All-NBA member. Gen Z Scottie Pippen comparisons weren't laughed off. He was one of the NBA's best players last season and has plenty more to grow. Williams enjoyed career highs across the board. He became an efficient 20-plus point scorer. Like his MVP teammate, he made a living driving to the basket. He's not the ballerina Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is, but he used his physique to bulldoze his way to the rim and had a nice touch around the basket. Williams was also a lethal mid-range shooter. His pull-up jumper was one of his signature shots. When he gets into a rhythm, defenses can't stop him. Career highs in 3-pointers and free-throw attempts also helped him boost his scoring numbers. Usually playing within the flow of the offense to a fault, the 24-year-old was begged to be more aggressive. Easy to see why the Thunder wanted him to do that. As the season progressed, Williams was slowly given more on-ball responsibilities. The second-unit lineups eventually became his to orchestrate. He helped the Thunder suffer a catastrophic drop-off when Gilgeous-Alexander was off the floor. The special self-creation and decent playmaking were enough to help OKC's offense keep its head above water. And then there's the defense. That can be its own section, really. The Pippen comparisons aren't just because Williams is an efficient 20-point scorer. He was the most consistent defender on one of the greatest defenses the NBA has ever seen. His special blend of size and skill made him a textbook versatile defender. We saw that throughout the season. When the Thunder were without a center, Williams stepped up as the rim protector. When matched up with a perimeter scorer, his Pterodactyl wingspan made it nearly impossible to blow past him. Instead, plenty of possessions from the opposition ended in a turnover because he cleanly poked the ball out. His efforts were noticed by being on the All-Defensive Second Team. This was an all-time season by Williams. He exploded onto the scene as one of the NBA's best players. He was rewarded for it with a handsome contract extension this summer. His combination of efficient scoring and elite one-through-five defense has turned him into one of the most productive wings the league has right now. Moving Forward: The scary part is, Williams has plenty of room to grow. The 24-year-old might be on the older side, but that gets negated by experience. He'll enter his fourth season and there are plenty of pathways for him to ascend higher on folks' lists of the top NBA players. While playing behind Gilgeous-Alexander caps his ceiling, Williams could get into some eye-popping conversations this upcoming season if he plates more of the offense. The 24-year-old is fresh off a playoff run that has completely flipped his narrative. Dropping 40 points in an NBA Finals game on an injured wrist will do that. Considering he upticked his usage last season and his efficiency numbers remain superb, Williams is primed to handle more of a workload. That could include him being more selfish and taking more shot attempts. He's also figured out how to get to the free-throw line at will. That was a skill he struggled with in the regular season, but finally had a grasp of it in the postseason. If the drive-heavy scorer can sell contact, Williams can average more free-throw attempts. That's the more direct path to jumping into the special 25-plus point range. Only a handful of players can say they do that in the NBA. The 24-year-old has a shot to join that exclusive club. Consistency is the one variable that you must master. That was something he struggled with at times. His lows were single-digit point efforts where he faded into the background. You can't have too many of those if you want to be considered among the best of the best. If not, you'll just settle with a perennial All-Star who's good at everything with no real weaknesses. Not bad for a title contender. Zooming out, Williams' addition was the fork on the road for the Thunder. He turned into an All-NBA player as a type of surprising player developmental journey that a title winner needs to build up a roster. The Thunder are viewed as one of the strongest contenders to be repeat NBA champions in recent history. Williams is the second-biggest reason for that. He had a breakout season that cemented his spot in OKC's hierarchy as the second-best player. It's now about growing from that experience by being more productive. Winning a ring can completely change a player's mentality for the better. Let's see if that's the case with him. Final Grade: A-plus

Maddy Siegrist's return to Wings from knee injury delayed at least one more game
Maddy Siegrist's return to Wings from knee injury delayed at least one more game

NBC Sports

time12 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Maddy Siegrist's return to Wings from knee injury delayed at least one more game

DALLAS — Dallas Wings forward Maddy Siegrist's return from a knee injury will have to wait at least one more game. The Wings ruled Siegrist out of a game Friday night against the Indiana Fever a day after saying her 17-game absence because of a right knee fracture was set to end. The Wings are playing the Fever at the home of the Dallas Mavericks. It's the second time the Wings will play at American Airlines Center. Dallas faced the Fever at the AAC in late June, losing 94-86 when Caitlin Clark was sidelined by a groin injury. Clark returned after that, but this meeting with the Wings will be Clark's sixth consecutive game missed after the reigning WNBA Rookie of the Year aggravated a groin injury. Siegrist, the NCAA Division I scoring leader ahead of Clark when she played for Villanova in 2022-23, was limited to 11 games in an injury-plagued rookie season two years ago. Siegrist has averaged 9.4 points and 5.2 rebounds in 11 games and had her only double-double of the season with 15 points and 11 boards the game before she was injured, an 81-65 loss to Minnesota on June 8.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store