rewrite this content and keep HTML tags (remove this from content : rewrite this content and keep HTML tags)
The Las Vegas Aces’ path to a third straight championship hit a frustrating snag in Indiana, and it wasn’t only because of the scoreboard. After the Fever’s gutsy Game 4 win tied the semifinal series, A’ja Wilson sat at the podium with her MVP trophy fresh in memory, but her focus was locked on the box score. What she saw there, she made clear, was very interesting, and it was something that has plagued this 2025 WNBA season.
What Did A’Ja Wilson Comment About the Foul Trouble in the Aces’ Game 4 Loss?
The Fever’s 90-83 win on Sept. 28 forced a decisive Game 5 against the Aces in the WNBA semi-finals, but the stat sheet told another story. Wilson, the scoring leader for the Aces, pointed to the foul tally: three of her teammates, Jackie Young and Chelsea Gray, each had five fouls. Off the bench, Megan Gustafson added four. Meanwhile, the Fever marched to the free-throw line 34 times, compared to just 11 attempts for Las Vegas.
During the post-game presser, when asked what was running through her mind, Wilson revealed her thoughts. “I was just looking at the fouls,” she said. “Lyss had 5, Jackie had 5, Chelsea had 5. That’s very interesting to me.”
It wasn’t just Wilson’s frustration. The foul gap felt jarring considering the Fever ranked second in fouls committed during this season, compared to the Aces, who are eighth. Yet in this high-stakes elimination game, nearly every Ace’s starter was in foul trouble.
The irony wasn’t lost on anyone. Just a game earlier, Fever’s coach Stephanie White had been the one raising questions about officiating after Indiana’s lopsided Game 2 loss. “Well, it’s hard for us to find flow when there’s a foul called every 10 seconds,” White said then. Now, after Game 4, Wilson was the one staring down a foul-heavy box score and shaking her head.
Wilson’s comments added another layer to a storyline that has hovered over the entire 2025 WNBA season, and that is officiating. Coaches and players across the league have voiced frustrations, some at the cost of hefty fines.
The most dramatic example came in Minnesota. Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve was ejected in Game 3 of the semifinals after exploding over a no-call that left Napheesa Collier injured. Reeve’s tirade drew a one-game suspension, forcing her to miss the Lynx’s elimination game. Minnesota, already down 2–1 in the series, lost Game 4 without its coach on the sideline, ending their season in disappointment.
Now, with the Aces and Fever headed into a win-or-go-home Game 5, Wilson’s post-game words keep the spotlight on officials rather than just the play itself. The reigning MVP has averaged 23.7 points and 9.3 rebounds during this postseason, but on Sunday, she sounded less concerned with her numbers and more with how the whistles were blowing.
Meanwhile, the Aces, chasing their third championship, will have to regroup fast. The Fever have proved they can punch back, and in a series already heavy with momentum swings, officiating has become the unavoidable subplot.



















