Home US SportsWNBA We’re having the wrong conversations about Angel Reese

We’re having the wrong conversations about Angel Reese

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When Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark entered the WNBA, many saw a potential rivalry that would carry the next generation of the league’s fans in the same way Bird and Magic once did for the NBA.

Instead, we are at an impasse, where both players are no longer the most obsessed-about stars, and neither has an argument for being the best player in the league.

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In a way, Angel Reese should be having the inverse arc. She left the dreadful Chicago Sky and is now flourishing on the Atlanta Dream’s top-ranked defense in the W, while continuing to be the best rebounder in league history and yet, instead of catapulting her into stardom, her growth and improvement in circumstances feel like they have gone under the radar.

Given what the consequences of attention for her have been, maybe that is better. Her records have long been invalidated by people claiming that her offensive rebounds were “Me-Bounds” — as if that makes them any less valuable — and undercut by social media compilations of her struggling to score in isolation.

There is an undeniable discriminatory aspect to this. Sexism and racism are alive and well, and targeting an outspoken black woman as one of the faces of a league built by largely black, queer women in a time when all of those groups are under attack is unfortunately par for the course.

But the reality is that a lot of fans fundamentally still do not understand Angel Reese’s value. Even worse, they’re no longer trying to, if they ever were in the first place.

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