Dawn Staley: Snubbed Caitlin Clark would be in 'high consideration' for Olympic team if roster were selected 'all over again​'



Dawn Staley — coach of NCAA women's basketball champion South Carolina and a Team USA's Olympic selection committee member — said rookie WNBA star Caitlin Clark would be in "high consideration" for the U.S. Olympic women's basketball team if the roster was selected "all over again."

Clark's exclusion from the Olympic roster was widely considered one of the biggest snubs in USA basketball history.

NBC host Mike Tirico prompted Staley on the topic earlier this week, asking her to "give me your read on that now that there's been some time."

Staley replied, "As a committee member, you're charged with putting together the best team of players, the best talent. Caitlin is just a rookie in the WNBA. [She] wasn't playing bad, but wasn't playing like she's playing now."

Then Staley acknowledged that "if we had to do it all over again, the way that she's playing, she would be in really high consideration of making the team because she is playing head and shoulders above a lot of people, shooting the ball extremely well. She is an elite passer. She's just got a great basketball IQ, and she's a little more seasoned in the pro game."

Clark has set the sports world on fire since her last year of college at Iowa — and since turning pro earlier this year, she has proven time and time again that she's the biggest draw in WNBA history. Not only is the young player showcasing talent unseen in the women's league, but she also has nearly tripled viewership and doubled attendance wherever she plays.

Reports from June 2024 found that the least attended game for Clark's Indiana Fever was higher than every other team's average home attendance.

For those reasons, many were baffled as to why the Olympic team would not capitalize on Clark's popularity.

"Hey, dummies, for the first time in the history of basketball you have arguably a player who is the most popular player in the world. You could argue right now Caitlin Clark is the most talked about, discussed, most popular, most puts asses in the seats, single basketball player in the world," Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy said at the time.

"And you leave her off the Olympics team?" he asked. "It's not only a showcase for her; it's for the sport and the other WNBA players who are on this team."

Staley is not a stranger to controversy in her own right, either. After winning the NCAA championship, Staley was asked if she thought men who believe they are women should be allowed to compete in women's basketball.

"I'm on the opinion of, if you're a woman, you should play. If you consider yourself a woman and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play. That's my opinion," she answered.

Team USA defeated Japan 102-76 in its first Olympic contest and will play Belgium on Thursday and Germany on Sunday.

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National Women’s Law Center Sides Against The Female Athletes Suing NCAA For Trans Insanity

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Screenshot-2024-05-21-at-12.54.09 PM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Screenshot-2024-05-21-at-12.54.09%5Cu202fPM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]The future of NCAA women’s sports is on the line in a lawsuit brought by the athletes at the forefront of the battle to protect females.

Meet The Outspoken Women Leading The Fight Against Men Invading Their Spaces

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'If you're a woman, you should play': NCAA champion coach Dawn Staley says transgender athletes should play against women

'If you're a woman, you should play': NCAA champion coach Dawn Staley says transgender athletes should play against women



NCAA women's basketball champion coach Dawn Staley said that she believed that if a person considers himself to be a woman, then he should be able to play against biological women in basketball.

Just days before winning the national championship against an iconic Iowa team, South Carolina coach Staley was asked by a reporter if she believed that men who identify as women should be allowed to play in women's basketball.

"You just talked about what a massive weekend this is for women's basketball, women's sports in general; one of the major issues facing women's sports is the debate/discussion topic about transgender athletes, biological males in women's sports," said Outkick's Dan Zaksheske.

"I was wondering if you could tell me your position on that issue."

"Damn, you got deep on me, didn't you?" Staley began. After a pregnant pause, the coach stated, "I'm on the opinion of, if you're a woman, you should play. If you consider yourself a woman and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play. That's my opinion."

"You want me to go deeper?" Staley asked the reporter.

"Do you think transgender women should be able to participate?" Zaksheske specified.

"That's the question you want to ask? I'll give you that. Yes, yes. So, now the barnstorm of people are going to flood my timeline and be a distraction to me on one of the biggest days of our game, and I'm okay with that. I really am."

Actually would have been totally ok with her declining to answer at that moment. Yes this is an important topic and issue but this will most definitely derail the focus of her team and organization to some degree and magnified by a billion if her answer was no. You can tell she\u2026
— (@)

Clearly, the added controversy of Staley's comments did not get to her team, as South Carolina won the 2024 NCAA Women's Basketball Championship by a convincing 87-75.

Many viewers who disagree ideologically with the coach stated they would have been fine with her avoiding the question all together, given the timing.

"Actually would have been totally ok with her declining to answer at that moment," said NBA player Jonathan Isaac. "Yes this is an important topic and issue but this will most definitely derail the focus of her team and organization to some degree and magnified by a billion if her answer was 'no.' You can tell she has the weight of the world on her shoulders as she’s processing. It’s unfortunate but here we are. Tough spot to be in for anyone. Regardless of beliefs," the Orlando Magic player added.

For sure, she was definitely caught off guard. So many people feel like they\u2019d know exactly what to do/say. I know what that feels like so regardless of my differing belief I can empathize with the position she\u2019s in and the mountains of pressure from m other women, society, black\u2026
— (@)

"Any healthy person would conclude men shouldn't be playing women's sports, but at the same time, there's a time and a place to ask these types of questions," sports analyst Gary Sheffield Jr. told Blaze News.

"We can't say Obama divided the country while asking women's coaches questions regarding gender while the sport is at its peak," he added.

Staley is a highly decorated basketball coach, having played at the college level for the University of Virginia as well as in the WNBA from 1999-2006.

Along with coaching for more than 15 years in the NCAA, the 53-year-old won gold as the coach of the women's USA basketball team at the 2020 Summer Olympics.

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LSU women's basketball head coach is the biggest villain in the league. And we're totally cheering her on



Jason Whitlock may be an outspoken Caitlin Clark fan, but for the Hawkeye's face-off against LSU, he's is rooting for the Tigers.

But it has nothing to do with LSU's superstar Angel Reese, aka the “Bayou Barbie.”

“LSU coach Kim Mulkey is the real star of women’s college hoops,” Whitlock says, but in the league, she is considered "the real villain" because she's a "force who threatens the left wing’s narrative on all of sports.”

While Whitlock believes Clark is “the most interesting and electrifying athlete in all of sports,” he also believes that “Mulkey is the most dangerous person in sports.”

“She’s the disruptor. The left-wing establishment wants to destroy Kim Mulkey. She’s the real ‘Bayou Barbie.’ The left hates her because she’s the antithesis of their chosen savior, South Carolina coach Dawn Staley,” he says.

While the ladies LSU team prepared for their Sweet 16 matchup against UCLA, the Washington Post published an 8,000 word takedown of Mulkey.

According to Whitlock, the piece framed Mulkey as “paranoid, vindictive, isolating, mean-spirited, and unloving.”

Mulkey and her lawyers pre-emptively threatened a lawsuit over the article, which likely forced reporters to tone down the attack.

The real reason the article was written, according to Whitlock, is because “Mulkey had the audacity to refuse to worship the LGBTQ alphabet mafia.”

“She advised Brittney Griner and other homosexual players to keep their private lives private” and “wasn’t a fan of tattoos” or “constantly changing hair colors.”

“Mulkey, without saying it, clearly believes there’s only two genders,” Whitlock says.

While that may make her an enemy in the realm of women's basketball, she's a hero in Whitlock's eyes.


Want more from Jason Whitlock?

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Are the rumors of Tom Brady's and Gisele Bundchen's marital woes justified?



Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen are rumored to be having marital issues in connection to Tom's decision to come out of retirement for another football season. In this clip, Jason Whitlock and his panel hash out the alleged marital woes and choose sides — Team Tom or Team Gisele.

Marital complications reported in the New York Post came to light after Tom ghosted training camp for three days and told the team he was having issues at home upon his return.

In Jason's view, Gisele's discontent is justified because the runaway model icon believed her husband was committed to retirement. "I think she has every right to be upset because happiness is based on expectations," Jason said, adding that Tom shouldn't dangle the retirement carrot in front of her and then snatch it back and not expect her to be mad about it.

Jason's guests, Shemeka Michelle and Steve Kim, disagree. Watch the clip to find out why.



Download the podcast here.

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Whitlock: Does Dawn Staley realize her South Carolina players face a greater threat in Memphis than at BYU?



I wonder if Dawn Staley, the queen of women’s college basketball, has heard the story of Eliza Fletcher.

Cleotha Abston, a career criminal, allegedly stalked, kidnapped, and murdered the 34-year-old schoolteacher on Friday. Fletcher, a mother and wife, was out on an early-morning jog in her hometown of Memphis, one of the most dangerous cities in America. According to statistics, you have a 1-in-12 chance of being a victim of violent or property crime while living in Memphis.

I wonder if Dawn Staley knows any of this. The South Carolina women’s coach recently canceled the Gamecocks’ home-and-home series against Brigham Young University because a Duke volleyball player, Rachel Richardson, claimed BYU fans taunted her with racial slurs.

“I just wanted to make sure our players didn’t have to endure that,” Staley told reporters this weekend. “Because if something happened of that manner, I don’t have the words to comfort them.”

Hmm. BYU was scheduled to play at South Carolina on Nov. 7. Next year, the Gamecocks were supposed to play at BYU.

There’s been no definitive evidence presented that the BYU crowd taunted Richardson or her teammates. The allegations first surfaced when Richardson’s godmother, Lesa Pamplin, a political candidate in Texas, tweeted that Richardson was racially harassed throughout the entirety of a televised volleyball match. Pamplin has a documented history of making anti-white racial remarks and promoting racial hoaxes.

BYU has a long history of hosting sporting events on its campus. The school’s basketball teams have a long history of employing black players and assistant coaches. BYU is known for its homogeneous white campus. It doesn’t have a reputation for using racial slurs at sporting events.

Today, a group of state politicians in South Carolina – the South Carolina Freedom Caucus – wrote a letter to Staley and athletics director Ray Tanner demanding that the school explain its hasty decision-making.

“Why did the University of South Carolina cancel the series against BYU when no supporting evidence existed to warrant such action? Will the University of South Carolina reschedule with BYU and issue a public apology if the allegations continue to be shown as false? Is it now the policy of the University to forgo, or more concerning, ignore any fact-finding missions into allegations of wrongdoing? Will the University be canceling all sporting events whenever any fan of any university against which the Gamecocks have an upcoming game is accused of acting inappropriately? Is the University of South Carolina now taking responsibility for all of its fans, regardless of any relationship with the University? What is the policy of the University of South Carolina for canceling games in which allegations of wrongdoing by a future opposing school’s fans are made? And finally, will the University of South Carolina decline any games with Duke University given the verifiable racially insensitive tweets by a member of Duke’s fan base, Mrs. Pamplin?”

The Freedom Caucus then made a series of freedom of information requests, seeking a paper trail to back up the decision to cancel the games.

South Carolina is the first school to cancel a home game out of fear that the visiting team’s fans would racially taunt their opponent. I guess Staley canceled the series out of fear of what might happen next year. Her players could be taunted.

The truth is Staley canceled South Carolina’s series with BYU to embarrass the Mormon institution and elevate her own profile. It was not a well-thought-out decision. It was emotional and manipulative.

Staley should do the same to Memphis. There’s actual proof that the city of Memphis is unsafe for young black people and people in general. The city’s murder rate rivals Chicago’s and St. Louis’. Last year, the mid-sized city recorded 346 murders.

For the first time in three decades, on Dec. 3, South Carolina will play Memphis. It’s a home-and-home series. Next year, the Gamecocks will travel to Memphis.

Where will Staley’s Gamecocks face more danger: Provo, Utah, or Memphis, Tennessee?

Based on the stats and reputation, Staley and the Gamecocks should bring extra security to Memphis. There’s plenty of evidence that Memphis is quite dangerous.

The tragedy that befell Eliza Fletcher is just the latest example. A year ago, the rap world and corporate media celebrated the murder of Young Dolph, the Nipsey Hussle of the South. The rappers say M.E.M.P.H.I.S. stands for making easy money pimping hoes in style.

That’s Memphis’ reputation.

Dawn Staley is comfortable taking a group of young women to Memphis, but not Provo. Staley is a hypocrite. Her hypocrisy is supported by corporate media.

In 2018, the Missouri Tigers played at South Carolina. There was an on-court fight that appeared to be instigated by Staley’s players. Sierra Michaelis, a former Mizzou basketball player, attended the game. She tweeted that South Carolina fans spit on Missouri players after the game. Here’s a link to the story.

Missouri’s athletics director, Jim Sterk, complained that Tigers players were called the N-word and spit on. He blamed Dawn Staley.

“We had players spit on and called the N-word and things like that,” Sterk said in 2018. “I mean it was not a good environment, and unfortunately and I think Coach Staley promoted that kind of atmosphere. And it’s unfortunate that she felt she had to do that.”

Staley dismissed the allegations as “serious and false.”

No one refused to play South Carolina. Stephen A. Smith never discussed the alleged racism bubbling within Staley’s program and fan base.

No one that I’m aware of has called out Staley for this blatant hypocrisy. When her fan base was accused of being out of control, she claimed her fans are the greatest in the world.

“Our fans are great. They’re loyal, they’re passionate, they understand basketball, they understand how to act in the stands,” she said.

“I stand by our fans. I stand by what they represent, I stand by how they cheer, I stand by every single thing they bring to the building, because it’s appropriate and well within the rules of the game.”

That’s black, elite privilege. Staley gets to defend her fan base. The BYU athletics director, Tom Holmoe, apologized before anyone even had a chance to investigate the legitimacy of Rachel Richardson’s claims.

This is idolatry. Based on skin color, Staley and her fans are above sin and BYU is covered in sin. Provo, Utah, is a place too dangerous for black women basketball players. Meanwhile, Memphis is heaven on earth.

Dawn Staley is committed to cleaning up Utah and ignoring Memphis. One percent of Utah is black. Sixty-four percent of Memphis is black.

Dawn Staley cares about Dawn Staley. She uses race to benefit her bank account.