Tuesday night’s Indiana Fever vs. Connecticut Sun matchup wasn’t just another game on the schedule — it became a flashpoint in the growing storm surrounding Caitlin Clark’s mistreatment in the WNBA. Indiana’s 88–71 win should have been a showcase of Clark’s continued dominance. Instead, it served as yet another reminder that the league’s biggest star — and most valuable asset — is being relentlessly tested, pushed, and now targeted by a league that seems, at best, cooly indifferent to her and the fanbase she brings with her.
🔥 Eye Poke, Retaliation, Chaos
It started in the third quarter with a moment that’s becoming all too familiar: Caitlin Clark on the receiving end of yet another unnecessary cheap shot from a jealous defender. This time, it was Jacy Sheldon, who blatantly poked Clark in the eye. Fed up, Clark responded physically when Sheldon tried to tower over her. The situation quickly spiraled. Marina Mabrey and veteran Tina Charles jumped in, and soon all four players were hit with technicals. Sheldon also received a Flagrant 1, but the damage — exacerbated by abysmal officiating — had already been done.
Caitlin Clark, Tina Charles and Marina Mabrey were all assessed technical fouls after this play.
— ESPN (@espn) June 18, 2025
Jacy Sheldon was assessed a Flagrant 1. pic.twitter.com/okfTpJjRS7
This isn’t just physical intensity — it’s deliberate escalation, enabled by a league that resents Clark’s success like a petulant child. The WNBA says it wants star power, but how can Clark shine when she’s being knocked around like she’s in a bar fight instead of a basketball game?
💪 Enter “The Enforcer”
With under a minute left and emotions boiling over, Sophie Cunningham laid a hard foul on Sheldon as she drove for a layup. Was it excessive? Perhaps. Was it about sending a message? Absolutely. Cunningham, with a black belt in Taekwondo and a chip on her shoulder, isn’t here to play nice. She’s here to make sure Clark doesn’t have to fight these battles alone.
Sophie Cunningham: The Enforcerpic.twitter.com/aOyGxFk4XH
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 18, 2025
That foul triggered yet another heated confrontation. Lindsay Allen got involved, and by the end of the scrum, Cunningham, Sheldon, and Allen were all ejected. Connecticut head coach Rachid Meziane called the incident “stupid” and “disrespectful.” But what’s more disrespectful — and quite frankly stupid — is allowing the league’s marquee star to be repeatedly roughed up without consistent enforcement of the rules.
Sophie Cunningham: The Enforcerpic.twitter.com/aOyGxFk4XH
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 18, 2025
Sophie Cunningham's IG Story after tonight's ejection pic.twitter.com/NgQWzljg4a
— Ballislife.com (@Ballislife) June 18, 2025
👀 Coach Stephanie White Pulls No Punches
Fever head coach Stephanie White didn’t sugarcoat things postgame. Unwilling to let her frustration simmer, she unloaded with both barrels. Clark’s reaction said it all.
“everybody’s getting better except the officials”
— cc akgae (@clrkszn) June 18, 2025
caitlin: pic.twitter.com/EMaYqvStZ8
She’s right. This isn’t a one-game phenomenon — it’s a systemic bias that borders on pathological hatred. In a league fighting for exposure, attention, and legitimacy, allowing Caitlin Clark to endure constant physical punishment isn’t just bad optics — it’s reckless. And everyone’s noticing.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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Not sure I understand. The girl in the white jersey lowered her shoulder and intentionally rammed her shoulder into the other girl. Yet, as I understand the ruling it was the girl who got tackled who had the foul called on her?