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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA – MAY 17: Angel Reese #5 of the Chicago Sky and Caitlin Clark #22 of the … More
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ESPN recorded its most viewed WNBA opening weekend in network history, driven by the Caitlin Clark-Angel Reese rivalry which continued on Saturday for their highly anticipated matchup. What began years ago as an Iowa vs. LSU rivalry between the former NCAA stars has evolved into a consistent multimillion-viewership event.
The Indiana Fever faced the Chicago Sky on Saturday during opening weekend of the 29th WNBA season, tallying a record 2.7 million viewers, with viewership peaking at 3.1 million. These totals are not entirely surprising given the years-long rivalry between the players, but such consistent television audience engagement represents something women’s sports haven’t enjoyed in previous decades. Until now, US Women’s National Soccer Team events stood as one of the few benchmarks for what regular multimillion viewership could look like in women’s sports.
Beyond The Broadcast
The consistency of this audience growth extends beyond game broadcasts. Across ESPN and ESPNW Instagram platforms following the Fever vs. Sky game, seven posts generated roughly 1.6 million likes and over 55,000 comments. Although this engagement should be celebrated, for women athletes, teams, and leagues, social media has proven both valuable and problematic in recent years. Given that women athletes have had to generate their own organic interest amid inconsistent media coverage and promotion, platforms like Instagram have provided a reliable and inexpensive way to grow their fan base. However, social media and digital spaces also harbor toxicity and harassment, particularly for women and girl athletes. Following the Fever vs. Sky game, which featured a controversial foul on Reese by Clark, fans and viewers wasted no time sharing their opinions online.
In true social media fashion, many users posted hateful comment on an ESPN post in response to the Caitlin Clark foul. Many users asserted Angel Reese would not have made the layup regardless:
“She wasn’t even gonna make the layup 🤦 ” – @hayd3n_33
“She was gonna miss that layup anyway 😂 ” – @terrence
“Angel Reese acting like she was going to make the layup…” – @body_by_bobby
Users also took the comments one step further and deliberately attacked Reese while commending Clark:
“Reese is the reason racism still exists thinks she’s entitled. Honestly embarrassing and sad to see the hatred she has for Clark” – @tdehav12
“Angel Reese hate button –>” [pointing to instagram ‘heart’ button feature] – @qu1nton_michel
“No. Angel Reese had to be separate Clark is too classy for that. That was a clean foul. Reese needs to get back up and continue playing.” -@ _willis_g
Finally, users positioned the foul as a way to disparage the WNBA, athletes, and women’s sport:
“Imagine going to see a professional basketball game & seeing ZERO dunks 😂.” – @thekooldadj
“Women’s sports 😂” – @xiv.mike
“This is why nobody watches 🙄 ” – @rex_moreno
Navigating Double Standards
Women athletes have long faced double standards across sport spaces. Sport, which is an inherently aggressive, physical, and intense pursuit for all participants regardless of gender, has fallen victim to feminine versus masculine stereotypes that permit certain aggressive behaviors for some while deeming them impermissible for others. While we will regularly see men athletes and coaches screaming and cursing at officials, referees, or showing heightened aggression towards opposing players, our intense socialization linking men to aggression leads us to more easily overlook these instances. We’re simply far more comfortable witnessing them.
For women athletes and coaches, however, any forms of yelling, cursing, or displaying extreme forms of aggression during competition is met with far less acceptance, as these behaviors don’t align with socialized beliefs about femininity. The commentary surrounding the Clark-Reese rivalry hasn’t escaped these outdated norms, while simultaneously introducing the added dimension of race and racial behaviors.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA – MAY 17: Angel Reese #5 of the Chicago Sky takes a hard foul from Caitlin … More
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Race as a component within the Clark-Reese narrative has generated relatively stark disparities in public perception, commentary, and treatment. While Clark, as a White athlete, often receives praise for her competitive intensity and outspoken nature, Reese faces harsher scrutiny for similar behaviors. This pattern reflects the well-documented double standard where Black women athletes endure more severe criticism for expressions of confidence, celebration, or competitive fire. Comments sections and social media discourse (similar to those shared previously) following their matchups consistently reveal coded language that labels Reese as “aggressive,” “unsportsmanlike,” or having an “attitude problem” for behaviors that, when exhibited by White athletes, and especially White men, are celebrated as “passionate” or “fiery.” Thus, leading to a double bind for Black women athletes such as Reese.
Unfortunately, this racial lens merely distorts the rivalry narrative, transforming what should be celebrated as an engaging competitive dynamic into something unnecessarily contentious. The disproportionate backlash Reese receives speaks to broader issues of how Black women’s expressions and emotions in sports spaces undergo heightened policing and mischaracterization, forcing them to navigate an unfair burden of representation that White athletes simply don’t face as frequently.