The Boston Celtics hosted the Dallas Mavericks in Game 2 of the 2024 NBA Finals on Sunday night. During the "NBA Countdown" pregame show, Malika Andrews, Stephen A. Smith, Mike Wilbon, Bob Myers and Josh Hart discussed Mavericks coach Jason Kidd saying that Jaylen Brown was the Celtics best player. While the panel didn't have much to disagree on during the segment, it did lead to an interesting moment between Smith and Myers.
Myers was talking about how Kidd's comments might be an attempt by the Mavericks coach to divide the locker room, as Myers pointed out that's what happens when a team is on top. The former Golden State Warriors general manager also pointed out that more than ever, people are trying to tear teams down and suggested that Stephen A. Smith was one of the people who might be doing exactly that.
Smith took exception and blamed social media instead.
"The Celtics are on top, right," said Myers. "And anytime you're on top people used to come at Curry and Durant. They'd come at you in the media. They come at you on the street. And the point isâand Josh knows thisâwhat matters is your locker room. The fabric of that locker room and what they can withstand. That Knicks fabric, you had that this year, but it is hard to find. We tear teams apart more than we ever have. Maybe on purpose, maybe not, maybe that guy down there."
That's when Smith jumped in to defend himself by saying, "Not me. Not me. Not me. That's social media. That's not me."
While the rest of the panel laughed, Myers joked about how he must have been mistaken. "Maybe you might," Myers asked. "That's somebody else? I thought it was you for a second there."
This marks the second time in a week that an ESPN colleague has called out Smith on-air after Monica McNutt put him on the spot on First Take for not using his platform to promote women's basketball before the Caitlin Clark era. When that happened, Smith took serious offense. And he clearly did not enjoy this moment either. We'll have to wait and see if he lets this one go tomorrow. It would certainly be interesting to hear him explain how he doesn't play some part in this exact kind of thing.
Mainstream menâs sports punditry has discovered the WNBA, and I wish it hadnât.
Popular programs like First Take and The Pat McAfee Show are typically preoccupied with the goings on in the NFL and NBA but have recently dedicated increased airtime to womenâs basketball. This type of universal coverage, and the exposure it generates, is what womenâs sports supporters and insiders have hoped for for decades. But now, itâs here, and it feels less like validation, and more like an affliction.
The heightened interest in womenâs basketball centers around the cultural phenomenon of Catilin Clark. Her collegiate career at Iowa is nothing short of groundbreaking, and her generational talent rightfully earned her a boatload of loyal fans. Clarkâs transition to the WNBA has been watched breathlessly, bringing an unprecedented level of attention to the league, buoying viewership, ticket sales and investment. With the Clark hype has come a flood of media scrutiny typically reserved for menâs sports leagues. The devolving discourseâwhich reached a fever pitch this week after the Chicago Skyâs Chennedy Carter committed a Flagrant 1 foul on Clark last Saturdayâhas exposed how unequipped a mainstream sports media dominated by men is for this moment.
"Who talks about the WNBA, who talks about women, who talks about women's sports more than First Take?" Stephen A. Smith asked Monica McNutt at the end of a 40-minute segment addressing the Carter foul on Clark on Mondayâs show. "Stephen A., respectfully, with your platform, you could have been doing this three years ago if you wanted to,â McNutt responded, leaving Smith incredulous.
Directing that question at McNutt, an accomplished former collegiate basketball player herself and established broadcaster, is laughable. Smithâs stance that First Take bestowed McNutt, and the WNBA, with a platform they ought to be grateful for echoes the prevailing sentiment that the leagueâs players owe Clark a debt of gratitude. Itâs patriarchal and condescending and fails to acknowledge the work of generations that has poured into the WNBA. McNutt later expanded on the exchange, saying, "I think what I was frustrated by in our conversation earlier is that we can hold more than one truth, y'all. The idea of some players being jealous, yes, that probably exists. But I think since Caitlin's made her debut, there's been a large and loud push that it's been Caitlin vs. the W."
The swirling commentary about Clarkâs unfair treatment at the hands of WNBA veterans does the 22-year-old rookie a disservice too, evidenced by Pat McAfeeâs bizarre defense (?) of the Fever star on Mondayâs episode of his show. "I would like the media people that continue to say, 'This rookie class, this rookie class, this rookie class'. Nah, just call it for what it is â there's one white b---- for the Indiana team who is a superstar," McAfee said, in an attempt to praise Clark. He later apologized for his remarks.
First, letâs get the obvious point out of the way: Itâs best not to refer to a professional athlete who one purports to revere in such derogatory terms. Second, the impulse to protect Clark is paternalistic and undermines her prowess as a physical and unrelenting competitor. Clark isnât a meek person in need of shielding, nor is she a shrinking violet, leading the league in technical fouls (three). The racial overtones are hard to ignore too. Sky rookie Angel Reeseâwho has 3.3 million Instagram followers and can also be credited with the recent rise in popularity of womenâs basketballâwas pulled down by the Connecticut Sunâs Alyssa Thomas, who was ejected from the May 25 game due to the Flagrant 2 foul. There hasnât been wall-to-wall coverage of that incident, nor has it inspired the same media firestorm that Carterâs hip check on Clark did.
The inclination to highlight the foul(s) on Clark alone exhibits an unfamiliarity with the WNBA. Itâs a physical league, and things get chippy, just like in any other professional sport. Unlike other leagues, however, the WNBA boasts very few roster spots, meaning on any given night the most elite basketball players in the world are on the floor battling it out in highly competitive matchups. While ânot appropriate,â as Sky coach Teresa Weatherspoon categorized Carterâs foul on Clark, it is also not remarkable, nor is it a new occurrence.
Putting a spotlight on something the way many sports media personnel have with the WNBA, isnât the same as illuminating it. What is coverage without curiosity? What is narrative without knowledge? What is an argument without good faith? All press is not in fact good press when, to McNuttâs point, Napheesa Collierâs standout season, Arike Ogunbowaleâs 40-point game and Aâja Wilsonâs MVP campaign are failing to break through. Itâs starting to feel like menâs sports commentatorsâ newfound interest, or at least newly articulated interest, in womenâs basketball, is being wielded as a cudgel, punishing any player, reporter or fan who isnât just grateful to be here.
The WNBA is a 28-year-old league with a rich history despite its young age. It has a lore that includes rivalries, dynasties, beefs and ballers. It has a cultureâfrom its players to its fansâthat is uniquely women-led, queer and Black. The W is unlike any other sports league in the U.S., and itâs better for its singularity. The current commentary is not only shortchanging the playersârookies and vets alikeâbut it is also willfully ignorant about the WNBAâs mores, taking a vibrant league and coating it with dull commentary. The WNBA deserves better than what the current landscape of talking heads has to offer.
1. You rarely see Stephen A. Smith left speechless, but that was the case on Monday morningâs episode of First Take thanks to panelist Monica McNutt.
After a discussion on Chennedy Carterâs cheap shot foul on Caitlin Clark that was the talk of the sports world over the weekend, Smith tried to take credit for his show giving extensive coverage to the WNBA.
McNutt, however, was not having it.
âWho talks about the WNBA, who talks about womenâs sports more than First Take,â asked Stephen A.
McNutt was not having the revisionist history.
âStephen A., respectfully, with your platform you couldâve been doing this three years ago if you wanted to,â replied McNutt.
This left Smith stunned and all he could muster was a pair of back-to-back âwows.â
A little back-and-forth followed:
McNutt: âYou know youâre my guyâŚâ
Smith: âWho does more than us?â
McNutt: âStephen A., Iâm talking to you. Donât do that. Iâm talking to you about the power than you have.â
Smith: âOK, OK. I got it. Youâre my girl, but you missed a lot episodes of First Take. You missed a lot.â
McNutt: âStephen A., three years ago you would not talk about the WNBA at this level. Donât do that.â
Itâs one thing for McNutt to disagree with Stephen A., but after he challenged her, she doubled down and didnât back down. That was impressive.
Sadly, moderator Molly Qerim cut off the discussion, which couldâve been riveting television of McNutt and Smith continued to argue over First Takeâs coverage of the WNBA.
I donât want to paint the media with one brush, but as someone who covers this stuff, Iâd say 99% of sprots media, including First Take, did not cover the WNBA the way theyâre covering it now. And even now, theyâre not covering the WNBA.
Theyâre covering Caitlin Clark.
2. I donât follow the WNBA, so I donât know what the unwritten rules are or what protocol is for something like this. However, if Iâm just comparing it to the NBA game, what I donât understand about the foul that Chennedy Carter committed against Caitlin Clark is how none of Clarkâs Fever teammates went after Carter and just let her get away with the cheap shot.
It's also good to see the refs in the WNBA are just as incompetent as the refs in all the other sports by calling this a common foul. (It got changed to a Flagrant-1 the following day.)
3. Since there has been a massive amount of coverage regarding the future of Inside the NBA over the past few weeks (especially in this column), I thought this nugget was worth sharing.
Last Thursday, more people watched Inside the NBA on TNT (2.8 million) after the Mavericks eliminated the Timberwolves in the Western Conference Finals than Game 5 of the Panthers-Rangers Eastern Conference Finals game on ESPN (2.1 million).
4. As proven here by Clemson, all of baseball needs more attempts at the hidden ball trick.
5. It has to be demoralizing for a hometown team when the fans in the stands are rooting for the opponent. Look at what took place in the San Francisco Giantsâ ballpark on Sunday when New York Yankees slugger Juan Soto hit a go-ahead two-run homer in the top of the 9th.
6. The latest episode of SI Media With Jimmy Traina features a conversation with Charles Barkley.
The Inside the NBA host discusses the possibility of TNT losing the NBA in the current television rights negotiations, his frustration with the lack of communication from Warner Brothers Discovery about the negotiations, whether the show could continue on another network, reaction from fans to the possible end of Inside the NBA, the awkwardness of still having to work next season for TNT if it loses the NBA beginning in the 2025â26 season, and the lack of loyalty from the NBA and what would make him decide between ESPN, NBC and Amazon if he became a free agent.
Barkley also goes off on CNN for never telling him that his show with Gayle King, King Charles, was canceled, he explains what could make him be the subject of a comedy roast, who the two nicest GOATS are in sports, the Lakers saying that LeBron James doesn't have a say in their coaching search and the reaction to his recent Caitlin Clark rant.
Following Barkley, Sal Licata from WFAN and SNY joins me for the weekly âTraina Thoughtsâ segment. This week's topics include the passing of Bill Walton, Ăngel HernĂĄndez's retirement from Major League Baseball, the mystery behind the Dov Kleiman Twitter account and the latest story about a restaurant charging for a ridiculous service.
7. RANDOM VIDEO OF THE DAY: Since hard fouls against Caitlin Clark are all the rage these days, letâs take a look at some of the hardest fouls in NBA history.
Beverley asked Adams if she subscribed to his podcast when she asked him a question during the locker room media scrum. After she admitted she did not subscribe to his podcast, he asked her to remove her microphone and leave the circle of reporters.
Smith believes a big fine could be coming for Beverley's unwarranted actions.
"I can't believe he did that. I just can't believe he did that," Smith began. "I've known Patrick Beverley for years. I love the brother. It's inexcusable. It's indefensible. When he threw the ball into the stands, he didn't mean to throw it at the woman. He meant to throw it at the guy... but he should have never thrown it the first time... And then to go into the locker room thereafter and to address a female reporter. I'm quite sure there are male reporters in the locker room who don't necessarily subscribe to Pat Beverley's podcast. Did you ask them whether they are subscribers to your podcast? Did you refuse to talk to them?
"It's indefensible. I love Pat Bev. I cannot defend it, not one bit. It is an incredibly bad look. A suspension? You can book it... The punishment is forthcoming and I suspect a severe one."
Beverley reportedly called Adams to apologize on Friday morning, and it's apparent that he is in some hot water with the NBA. Time will tell just how severe the punishment is for Beverley for his off-court antics on Thursday night.