Caitlin Clark & Cheryl Reeve: The WNBA’s Most Awkward Alliance Yet?
One’s the face of a new era.
The other? The architect of the old one.
And this summer, they’ll be wearing the same sideline colors — whether they want to or not.
Caitlin Clark will officially be coached by Cheryl Reeve in the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game, a pairing that has the league calling it “symbolic” and fans calling it… tense.
An Announcement That Spoke Volumes in Silence
The WNBA’s post was bare bones:
“Team East Coach: Cheryl Reeve. Captain: Caitlin Clark.”
No quotes. No highlights. Just vibes — and they weren’t warm.
Because Clark, the dynamic rookie who’s broken viewership records and All-Star votes, is now paired with the very coach who snubbed her from Team USA: Reeve.
Clark vs. Reeve: More Than a Clash of Styles
Clark is speed, spontaneity, and spotlight.
Reeve is structure, defense, and tradition.
Clark didn’t play by the rules — she rewrote them.
Reeve? She built the rulebook.
And now they’re expected to collaborate, days after one left the other off the Olympic roster.
Fans Smell Tension — Not Teamwork
Within hours, hashtags like #OlympicAwkwardness and #ClarkAndReeve were trending. One fan joked, “This feels like the league arranged a wedding between exes.” Another asked: “If Reeve didn’t want to coach her in Paris, what’s she gonna do in Phoenix?”
Final Thought: Unity… or Uneasy?
The WNBA may think this is unity in action.
But fans know better.
This isn’t just a coaching assignment — it’s unfinished business.
And come All-Star night?
That handshake might be the real main event.