Megyn Kelly TEARS INTO Angel Reese Over Caitlin Clark Probe π₯ββItβs a Joke!β She Names Names & Drops Truth Bombs That Left Viewers STUNNED
What just happened in the WNBA isnβt just another sports storyβitβs a cautionary tale about viral outrage, media bias, and how one TikTok post hijacked an entire leagueβs spotlight. A full-blown racism investigation was launched, social media exploded, commentators declared guilt before facts were known, and nowβafter 10 days of interviews, video reviews, and national hand-wringingβthe result is in:Β no evidence of racism was found.
But letβs rewind and walk through how this story unraveled, twist by twist.
It all began whenΒ Caitlin Clarkβs Indiana Fever squared off against the Chicago Sky, home to the ever-controversial Angel Reese, who has quickly become one of the leagueβs most talked-about rookies. The WNBA season opener was meant to showcase elite talent, rivalries, and the new era of womenβs basketball. Instead, it spiraled into one of the most polarizing controversies in recent memory.
The Game: A Flagrant Foul or Just Basketball?

In the heat of the match, Clark committed a hard foul on Reese, swiping her arm during a rebound attempt. Reese went down, got back up, and followed Clark across the court. It was physical. It was tense. But both players chalked it up to competitive basketball in postgame interviews.
βThatβs the game. Weβre competitors,β Reese said.
Clark added, βItβs just part of basketball.β
Everyone thought that was that. Until it wasnβt.
The Accusation: A Social Media Post Goes Nuclear
Suddenly, whispers began spreading online. Anonymous social media users claimed Fever fans had hurledΒ racist abuseΒ at Angel Reese during the game. No specifics. No recordings. No videos. Just vague allegations amplified at light speed.
TheΒ Associated PressΒ quickly reported that the WNBA was investigating. The league responded with a strong statement:
βThe WNBA strongly condemns racism, hate, and discrimination in all forms. They have no place in our league or in our society.β
That statement alone sent shockwaves. Was something truly heinous said from the stands? Was Angel Reese the target of racial slurs?
And then, Angel Reese added fuel to the fire.
The TikTok That Lit the Match
Reese posted aΒ now-deleted TikTok videoΒ showing Caitlin Clark walking away after the foul. The caption?
βWhite gal running from the fade.β
The post instantly went viral. Supporters said Reese was being authentic. Critics slammed it as race-baiting. The timing was astonishingβReese posted the videoΒ afterΒ the league announced its investigation into alleged racism from Clarkβs fans.
Why pour gasoline on a fire already burning?
Reese Doubles Down
Reese didnβt stop with the TikTok. She told reporters the racist comments had been βvery hard to deal withβ and thanked the WNBA and her team for their support:
βObviously thereβs no place in this league for that. Iβve had communication from so many people across this league supporting me through this whole processβ¦ It could happen to anyone.β
It sounded serious. It felt real. But there was one glaring problem:
There was no proof.
No Teammates Heard It. No Coaches Reported It. Nothing Was Caught on Tape.
Reporters soon discovered thatΒ not a single teammate or coachΒ had heard any racist comments during the game. In fact, they wereΒ completely unawareΒ of any incident until it surfaced on social media.
The investigation, it turns out, was launched basedΒ entirely on anonymous social media posts.
There was no player complaint during the game. No immediate reaction from Reese or the Sky staff. No arena personnel reported anything either.
So what were they even investigating?
The βMonkey Soundsβ Clip That Went Nowhere
One of the key points of online speculation focused on a clip from the fourth quarter. Reese was at the free-throw line. Some claimed they heardΒ βmonkey soundsβΒ in the backgroundβa horrifying implication if true.
But when analysts and the league reviewed the video, the noise turned out to beΒ screeching laughter or a noisemakerβthe kind of sound often heard in high-energy arenas during clutch moments.
βTo me, it sounds like a noisemakerβthose weird ones people use on New Yearβs Eve,β one commentator said.
βCertainly doesnβt jump out as a racist slur.β
Yet,Β this single momentβcompletely unconfirmedβwas used to justify media outrage and wall-to-wall speculation.
The Media Pile-On: A Masterclass in Narrative Over Facts
With the story spiraling,Β major sports commentators jumped inβwithout waiting for any evidence.Β Monica McNutt of ESPN was one of the loudest voices.
βIf this was the other way around, oh lordβ¦ the conversation wouldβve exploded.β
She added that the WNBAβs statement showed how serious the racism was. But again,Β what racism? What comments? Whereβs the proof?
Emmanuel Acho from Fox Sports and Chiney Ogwumike from ESPN also chimed in, painting the situation as an undeniable example of racial abuse.
βPeople are using this as a cover for their innate racism,β Acho said.
βThis is their chance to say what theyβve always wanted to say about Angel Reese.β
But whatΒ exactlyΒ was said? Stillβno one could answer.
There were no quotes, no verified footage, and no statements from any actual fan in the arena.
The WNBAβs Final Verdict: Nothing Substantiated
After 10 days of diggingβinterviewing fans, speaking with arena staff, and analyzing game footage from every angleβthe WNBA dropped its findings:
βBased on information gathered to date, including from relevant fans, teams and arena staff as well as audio and video review of the game, we have not substantiated the allegations.β
Let that sink in.
After all the coverage, the statements, and the headlines,Β there was nothing. No verified racism. No confirmed abuse.
The Fallout: A Lesson in Social Media Outrage
Despite the lack of proof, many still insisted Reeseβs βfeelings shouldnβt be dismissed.β Others argued thatΒ emotions are not evidence.Β Feelings can be validβbut they canβt substitute for facts when accusing an entire arena of racism.
So what did we learn?
One viral postΒ can hijack the WNBAβs biggest storylines.
Anonymous social media accountsΒ can launch full-blown investigations.
Mainstream commentatorsΒ will often run with unverified claimsβthen double down.
AndΒ public institutions, like the WNBA, can get dragged into the chaos without a shred of real-time evidence.
This controversy shifted attention away from the players, the game, and the sport itself. Instead of celebrating Clark and Reeseβs talent and competitiveness, we were embroiled in a firestorm based on hearsay.
In the end,Β the only thing proven was how easily a race hoax can take center stageβespecially in the era of social media and click-hungry headlines.Β Maybe next time, the league and the media will wait for facts before fanning the flames. Or maybe this is just the new normal.
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