Last year, Angel Reese was more than willing to discuss what she perceived as her large role in helping to grow the WNBA. This year, she does not want to talk about it.
Headlines were made in June of last year when Reese defiantly informed the media that the sudden interest in the WNBA and future growth of the league was not just about Indiana Fever phenom Caitlin Clark, it was about “Me too.”
“The reason why we’re watching women’s basketball is not just because of 1 person. It’s because of me, too. I want y’all to realize that,” Reese said at the time.
"The reason why we're watching women's basketball is not just because of 1 person. It's because of me, too. I want y'all to realize that"
— Hoops (@HoopMixOnly) March 10, 2025
Angel Reese speaks: pic.twitter.com/DnEWECm3Y0
On Tuesday, a reporter reminded Reese of her “bold statement” about her impact on the league and asked her if she felt the same way.
Reese’s response was brief.
A reporter asked Angel Reese if she wanted to expand on her bold statement from last year — that fans don’t just watch women's basketball for one player, but they watch because of her too.
— DraftKings (@DraftKings) May 13, 2025
Angel’s response? “Next question.”
(via Chicago Sky) pic.twitter.com/xo07XIbeHN
What a difference a year makes!
Reese has good reason not to want to discuss her comments from last year. Since then, the nation has been treated to reams of evidence that the exponential growth of the WNBA had very little to do with Angel Reese or anyone else in the WNBA not named Caitlin Clark.
The former Iowa Hawkeye had perhaps the greatest and most impactful rookie season of any athlete, male or female, in sports history.
Clark eclipsed records for the most points scored by a rookie in WNBA history, the all-time scoring record for a point guard, the new mark for most assists in a single game, the record for most assists in a single season by any WNBA player, and the rookie record for the number of triple-doubles in a season. She also passed Diana Taurasi for second place for the most made three-pointers by any player in a season.
And that’s not even mentioning her impact on team and league merchandising, attendance, and viewership.
Caitlin Clark's WNBA rookie season has come to an end.
— Front Office Sports (@FOS) September 26, 2024
• Fever attendance up 319%
• AP WNBA Rookie of the Year
• Most PTS, AST, 3PM by a rookie ever
• WNBA merch sales up 450%, led by Clark
• >100% increase in viewers across national networks
MORE » https://t.co/6mIWrud8Lt pic.twitter.com/mFUgnvY9pf
Angel Reese is right to let last year’s comments go. This is Caitlin Clark’s league right now; everyone knows it, including her.