Diana Taurasi, Who Said ‘Reality Is Coming’ for Caitlin Clark, Gets Roasted by Fans After Missing All-Star List
Diana Taurasi, a WNBA veteran and icon, made a statement about the transition rookie players face when stepping into professional league, particularly referring to Caitlin Clark, a promising newcomer and No. 1 draft pick. Taurasi, playing for Phoenix Mercury, warned of the challenges Clark would face transitioning from college to professional basketball.
As the WNBA season progressed, reality unfolded differently. Clark excelled, becoming the second top vote-getter in the WNBA All-Star Game balloting, right after two-time MVP A’Ja Wilson. Meanwhile, Taurasi did not make the top ten, or even the top thirty, in the All-Star voting. Despite a respectable performance from Taurasi in the season, scoring averages that closely matched her entire career, her earlier comment about Clark seemed to backfire as Clark demonstrated substantial success early in her career.
The public and fan reaction to Taurati’s comment and the subsequent voting for the All-Star game became a broader discussion point. Critics argued that All-Star and Olympic team selections often do not align entirely with current performance, citing Taurasi’s selection for the U.S. Olympic team despite perceived dips in her performance and overshadowing of newer talents like Clark.
the situation underscored the ongoing shifts in the WNBA, with emerging stars like Clark challenging the established legends such as Taurasi, reshaping expectations and fan engagements around the league. This shift further stirred debates around the recognition and support for the WNBA, touching on underlying issues of gender and sports viewership dynamics.
By C. Douglas Golden June 22, 2024 at 7:05am
Unfortunately, as the season progresses, reality has come — and darned if it that comment didn’t come back and bite Taurasi hard.
According to Athlon Sports, Clark, the No. 1 pick in this year’s WNBA Draft, is the second-leading vote getter in the WNBA All-Star Game balloting, which is to be played in Phoenix, Arizona — Taurasi’s home turf.
Taurasi did not even make the top ten. Or, for that matter, the top 30.
Now, granted, sports isn’t a popularity contest and Clark isn’t in the running for league MVP or anything like that. However, she was the second vote-getter behind two-time league MVP A’Ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces, the reigning champion.
Third was another Indiana Fever player, Clark’s teammate Aliyah Boston, who was last year’s Rookie of the Year. Breanna Stewart of the New York Liberty was fourth, Irike Ogunbowale of the Dallas Wings was fifth.
Angel Reese, Clark’s fellow rookie and bête noire, was seventh.
We gotta get Caitlin Clark to #1 on this list
Link to vote in the replies ⬇️#WNBA pic.twitter.com/1ogzAPraOo
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 21, 2024
We gotta get Caitlin Clark to #1 on this list
Link to vote in the replies ⬇️#WNBA pic.twitter.com/1ogzAPraOo
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 21, 2024
Do you think Diana Taurasi should apologize to Caitlin Clark?
Granted, fan sentiment sometimes doesn’t equal the reality of performance. Consider that five Fever players were in the top 30 in All-Star Game voting; while Clark’s team has managed to climb back from an 0-5 start to a 7-10 record as of Friday, nobody is pegging them as a WNBA colossus.
Caitlin Clark and 5 other Fever players were in the top 30 vote getters
Olympian Diana Taurasi did not make the list#WNBA https://t.co/IDp0JOgqe8 pic.twitter.com/4sUFQkZaNZ
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 21, 2024
Caitlin Clark and 5 other Fever players were in the top 30 vote getters
Olympian Diana Taurasi did not make the list#WNBA https://t.co/IDp0JOgqe8 pic.twitter.com/4sUFQkZaNZ
— Clark Report (@CClarkReport) June 21, 2024
However, it’s another sign that Taurasi’s comment — made to ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt several months ago, before Clark began playing — will come back to haunt her.
“Look, SVP. Reality is coming. There’s levels to this thing. And that’s just life, we all went through it,” former UConn star Taurasi said in April, according to the Hartford Courant.
“You see it on the NBA side, and you’re going to see it on this side. You look superhuman playing against 18-year-olds, but you’re going to come with some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time.
“Not saying that it’s not going to translate, because when you’re great at what you do, you’re just going to get better. But there is going to be a transition period, where you’re just going to have to give yourself grace as a rookie, and it might take a little bit longer for some people.”
Diana Taurasi on Caitlin Clark coming to WNBA “Reality is coming….you look superhuman playing against some 18 years olds but you’re going to come play with some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time” pic.twitter.com/fxBxGoRZCS
— Gifdsports (@gifdsports) April 6, 2024
Diana Taurasi on Caitlin Clark coming to WNBA "Reality is coming….you look superhuman playing against some 18 years olds but you're going to come play with some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time" pic.twitter.com/fxBxGoRZCS
— Gifdsports (@gifdsports) April 6, 2024
Unfortunately, yes, reality does come — and that reality is that a new generation of WNBA stars are set to replace Taurasi and Co., who have done well for themselves on the court but haven’t exactly built the league’s fanbase.
Taurasi, who’s been in the league for 20 years now, is currently averaging 16.9 points per game, 5.0 rebounds and 2.1 assists. This is slightly below her career averages — 19.0 points per game, 3.9 rebounds, 4.2 assists — but not dramatically. It’s also her best season, points-wise, since 2020.
Clark, 17 games into her rookie year, is averaging 16.2 points per game, 5.4 rebounds and 6.2 assists.
So who, exactly, is getting hit by reality here? Fans roasted Taurasi not just for the comment for the fact she’s on the U.S. Olympic squad and Clark is not:
All-Star/Olympic team selections should be based on performance/merit. Too often they’re not. Diana Taurasi (WNBA legend) is 41 years old & playing like it. Brittney Griner has been injured/in captivity. Rookie Caitlin Clark continues to set records. She should be an Olympian.
— ✒ML📚 (@MFL____) June 9, 2024
All-Star/Olympic team selections should be based on performance/merit. Too often they're not. Diana Taurasi (WNBA legend) is 41 years old & playing like it. Brittney Griner has been injured/in captivity. Rookie Caitlin Clark continues to set records. She should be an Olympian.
— ✒ML📚 (@MFL____) June 9, 2024
Just voted for my WNBA All-Star picks led by Caitlin Clark and Aliyah Boston! No Dinosaur Taurasi on my team.#CaitlinClark #AliyahBoston #IndianaFever #WNBA pic.twitter.com/tNzEEXpnjq
— Lisa Michaels (@RD46397310) June 20, 2024
Just voted for my WNBA All-Star picks led by Caitlin Clark and Aliyah Boston! No Dinosaur Taurasi on my team.#CaitlinClark #AliyahBoston #IndianaFever #WNBA pic.twitter.com/tNzEEXpnjq
— Lisa Michaels (@RD46397310) June 20, 2024
Caitlin Clark will be there without a doubt. But it would be too funny if any of the Olympians, particularly Diana Taurasi and Britney Griner are not selected for the WNBA all-star.
— Mae (@Mae141590) June 13, 2024
Caitlin Clark will be there without a doubt. But it would be too funny if any of the Olympians, particularly Diana Taurasi and Britney Griner are not selected for the WNBA all-star.
— Mae (@Mae141590) June 13, 2024
Of course, this is why Clark is such a story to begin with. Yes, she’s clearly got generational talent — and sports fans are sitting up and paying attention. But are WNBA players and supporters happy? No, shockingly, they’re not.
For years, we’ve been told as sports fans that our refusal to embrace the WNBA was a sign of blatant sexism in sports. And then we did start paying attention — and the league’s supporters were still salty. It turns out our support wasn’t supposed to be based on whether the game was any good or not. We were making a statement.
And now fans are making a statement. Reality hurts, Diana.
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