Caitlin Clark Wins MVP and the Commissioner’s Cup — But the Media Shrugs
When Caitlin Clark led the Indiana Fever to a decisive Commissioner’s Cup victory over the Minnesota Lynx, fans expected celebration. What they got instead? Silence.
No viral interviews. No ESPN highlight reels. Barely a nod from league social accounts. Clark dropped 22 points and 11 assists — and still, the media spotlight flickered elsewhere.
“They didn’t say it,” one fan tweeted. “But we heard it: If Caitlin wins, it doesn’t matter.”
Despite Clark earning her first WNBA trophy and MVP honors, coverage was conspicuously minimal. ESPN buried the story. Analysts shifted credit to “team effort.” And the league’s official accounts focused more on the Lynx’s loss than the Fever’s triumph.
Hashtags like #TheyNeverClap, #WNBABias, and #LetHerWin trended as fans noticed the disconnect.
“When other players win, it’s a dynasty. When Clark wins, it’s downplayed,” another fan posted.
Even inside the Fever locker room, the tension was felt. One coach noted, “The media wasn’t there to celebrate — they were there to move on.”
Clark, usually composed, offered smiles postgame — not of joy, but understanding. She knows what’s happening.
The problem? Media loves Clark when she boosts viewership — not when she dominates the court. Her wins threaten the old guard’s narrative control.
And now fans are fighting back, demanding equal recognition. Because Caitlin Clark didn’t just win a trophy — she exposed a bias.
If a star wins and no one covers it… did it even happen?
According to fans? It absolutely did.