UPDATE (May 7, 2024, 5:28 p.m. ET): Indianapolis Star columnist Gregg Doyle will not be covering the Indiana Fever this season, a spokesperson for that newspaper told The Washington Post.
When Caitlin Clark first arrived in Indianapolis to be introduced as a member of the Indiana Fever Wednesday morning, the team rolled out the red carpet for the No. 1 overall pick in Monday night’s WNBA draft. Screaming fans greeted her. Her new head coach, Christie Sides, was fist-pumping. There were even donuts iced with Clark’s new Fever jersey. That level of pomp and circumstance is to be expected for a generational talent like Clark.
But what wasn’t expected, and what was frankly inappropriate for a moment like this, was a journalist’s deeply cringeworthy remarks to Clark during her first Indianapolis news conference as a professional basketball player.
What was inappropriate for a moment like this, was a journalist’s cringeworthy remarks to Clark during her first Indianapolis news conference.
Gregg Doyel, a columnist for the Indianapolis Star, introduced himself and said, “Real quick I’ll do this” as he formed the shape of a heart with his hands. “You like that?” Clark stuttered back in response.
“I like that you’re here,” Doyel replied. Clark then interrupted and replied providing context for what’s become her signature gesture: “Yeah, I do that at my family after every game,” she said as she looked down from the mic.
“Well, OK, start doing it to me and we’ll get along just fine,” Doyel replied.
Clark’s facial expression said it all. Her eyes were wide and her mouth was wide open. She smiled trying to hide the shock and discomfort. Doyel finally got to his question, but the damage had been done.
Reporter: 🫶
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) April 17, 2024
Caitlin Clark: "You like that?"
Reporter: "I like that you're here."
Caitlin: "Yeah, I do that at my family after every game.”
Reporter: "Start doing it to me and we'll get along just fine."
Caitlin: 😳
(via @IndianaFever / YT)pic.twitter.com/BBjU881K7a
Here Clark was making her debut as a WNBA player. She was making her debut as a professional basketball player in the U.S. and she wasn’t treated like a professional.
She was met with an incredibly unprofessional exchange that not only served as a distraction, but it took away from the rest of the presser and overshadowed Clark’s first moments in her new home.
Doyel apologized in a very awkward column hours after the press conference. “I’m devastated to realize I’m part of the problem,” he wrote in his apology. “I screwed up Wednesday during my first interaction with No. 1 overall draft pick Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever.”
It was about 500 words of apologizing and navel-gazing. Doyel’s mea culpa would have been much more effective if he had addressed what his exchange with Clark represents about how WNBA players have often been disregarded by journalists like him.
For so long, women’s sports, both college and professional, have been denigrated and belittled. They’ve been infantilized rather than treated as athletes worthy of attention. Such behavior has been especially prevalent in WNBA coverage.
After Doyel’s inappropriate remarks to Clark, Lindsay Gibbs, author of the Power Plays Newsletter, predicted on X that local and national reporters who initially thought “WNBA coverage was beneath them” are going to come and cover the sport and expect “a red carpet” and a round of “applause.”
She’s right. But, as someone who covers women’s basketball, I can tell you that that’s already been happening. In the fall, when the New York Liberty made it back to the WNBA finals for the first time in 22 years, reporters who had previously only covered the market’s NBA teams parachuted in without taking the time or due diligence to learn about the league or all the things that had preceded the team arriving at such a big moment. Some of their questions proved that they hadn’t done their homework.
I’ve covered the Liberty closely since 2019 and have seen up close what the team has been through for the past five years. While I welcome folks in to grow the coverage, I believe that growth ought to come without arrogance and chauvinism.
“Sports media has been extremely complicit in marginalizing and infantilizing women’s sports,” Jemele Hill wrote on X. “A lot of the commentary and coverage is now coming from people who have little experience covering female athletes (not sure Doyel fits that category) — which is probably frustrating to the people who have been covering them for years.”









