If anyone knows Caitlin Clark and her impact on women’s basketball, it’s Debbie Antonelli.
Not only has Antonelli lent her voice to calling men’s and women’s basketball for ESPN, but she also covers the Indiana Fever. Awful Announcing’s readers ranked her and Pat Boylan as the No. 1 local broadcasting team for 2024. And perhaps her intimate knowledge of Clark has given Antonelli a rare insight into how profoundly Clark is shaping the future of women’s basketball.
Here is what some of AA’s readers had to say about Antonelli:
Antonelli garnered similar praise for bringing “so much energy and knowledge” and for being “just as good as she is when she does college WBB games.” As a duo, they’re “always entertaining and accurate,” “do a good job of letting the game determine the conversation,” and “teach me a lot about the game.”
Suffice it to say, she knows a thing or two about the women’s game. So when she speaks about Clark’s generational impact, as she did recently on the C.L. Brown Show, people listen.
“While we’ve had incredible decades and decades worth of talented players, we’ve never had the economic disruption that Caitlin has brought to basketball — and we desperately needed it,” Antonelli said. “And you can evaluate the talent any way you want, and you can talk about the great legacy of so many great players, but no one’s disrupted the economic marketplace and the ecosystem like she has. And that gets everybody paying attention.
“So, for all of that, that’s so important because we needed that disruption just to jumpstart the next level.”
This disruption, she believes, is exactly what women’s basketball needed to reach the next level. And Clark isn’t alone; Antonelli also highlighted the new wave of star players like Angel Reese and Cameron Brink, who, along with Clark, are encouraging more young girls to see themselves in the game.
“But, I can just tell you by what I experienced this summer in the WNBA, watching how many No. 22s were walking by — little girls, dads, little boys, college-aged guys; I gotta believe that the game’s going to keep evolving on the grassroots level, which I think we were kind of stalled and dropping. Now, I think girls and women are playing more basketball because, now, they’re seeing more opportunities that can be around the game.”
For Antonelli, the future of women’s basketball has never looked more prosperous. And as more No. 22 jerseys keep showing up in the crowds, Clark’s impact will only continue to be felt.
[The C.L. Brown Show]