
“Protect Caitlin Clark”: ESPN Shatters WNBA’s Code of Silence on Live TV
It didn’t happen in a tweet.
It wasn’t whispered on a podcast.
It exploded on live national television, during ESPN’s primetime “GamePoint” segment.
Former WNBA All-Star and analyst Danielle Mercer broke the silence fans have been screaming about for weeks — calling out the league, its referees, and its culture of neglect:
“You can’t grow a league on her name — and then leave her body unprotected.”
The segment aired alongside unfiltered footage of five straight games where Caitlin Clark endured elbows, shoves, and slaps — with no whistles. The studio went dead silent. The internet did the opposite.
Within an hour, the clip had 10 million views, and hashtags like #ProtectCaitlin and #WNBAWakeUp dominated TikTok and X.
What made this hit hard?
Mercer wasn’t ranting — she was reporting. Calm. Controlled. Unapologetic.
“That’s not basketball. That’s exploitation.”
The league’s response? Silence.
But insiders say they’re scrambling behind the scenes.
Because for the first time, the media didn’t protect the narrative — it protected the player.