-
Louvre Robbery Raises Questions About Security - 9 mins ago
-
Federal immigration agent hospitalized after shooting in South Los Angeles - 30 mins ago
-
NFL Insider Makes Bold Claim on Sam Darnold’s Success With Seahawks - 35 mins ago
-
North Carolina Senate Approves New Map in Effort to Add G.O.P. Congressional Seat - 53 mins ago
-
Gen Z Couple Buy Home, No One Prepared for Who Man Dedicates Key Room To - about 1 hour ago
-
L.A. car chase suspect run over by multiple vehicles on live TV - about 1 hour ago
-
Inside Luigi Mangione’s Missing Months - 2 hours ago
-
Russia Accuses NATO Country of Threatening Putin’s Plane: ‘Terrorist Acts’ - 2 hours ago
-
Tropical Storm Melissa spaghetti models show chances of striking Florida - 2 hours ago
-
How Trump Reprogrammed Funds to Pay Some Workers During the Government Shutdown - 2 hours ago
Caitlin Clark Makes Major Decision About Playing in Unrivaled League
Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark has been in the headlines quite a bit over the last few days through no fault of her own.
Clark, who hasn’t played a game since July 15 because of a groin injury that ended her season, was dragged into the spotlight because of derogatory remarks made about her by WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert.
During her end-of-season media availability, Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier made it known to reporters that Engelbert told her Clark “should be grateful” she makes $16 million through her endorsements because she wouldn’t make anything without the WNBA’s platform.
Clark was asked about Engelbert’s comments during her own end-of-season press conference on Thursday, to which she gave a telling response.
More Basketball: WNBA Commissioner ‘Likely’ Out After Napheesa Collier, Caitlin Clark Remarks
“I have great respect for Phee…she made a lot of valid points,” Clark told reporters. “Phee said it all. … This is straight-up the most important moment in this league’s history.”
If Clark really wanted to stick it to Engelbert, she could.
The upstart 3-on-3 Unrivaled basketball league has been after Clark to join for quite some time, and after reports of the “Lionel Messi-like” offer the league threw her way, she could likely ask for whatever she wanted to join in Year 2 and she’d get it.
Multiple reports indicated that Unrivaled offered to make Clark the highest-paid player in the league with a reported salary in excess of $1 million last year—more than 12 times her $78,000 WNBA salary—which she turned down.
More Basketball: WNBA Commissioner Breaks Silence on Napheesa Collier-Caitlin Clark Controversy
And while the league likely would’ve pursued her just as aggressively this offseason, it was reported by Front Office Sports on Thursday that Clark will turn it down a second time.
“Caitlin Clark will not play in Unrivaled this winter, multiple sources familiar with the matter told Front Office Sports,” FOS’ Annie Costabile, Dennis Young and Margaret Fleming wrote.
Clark shares an agent with Collier, who’s one of Unrivaled’s co-founders. And while her mind appears to be made up, it’s also possible she could have a change of heart before the league kicks off its eight-week schedule in mid-January.
Source link