Fever Christie Sides & Caitlin Clark Didnât Hold Back On Angel Reese FLAGRANT 1 FOUL
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Fever star Caitlin Clarkâs unfazed reaction to hard flagrant foul from Angel Reese
Caitlin Clark has embraced WNBA physicality in her rookie season.
INDIANAPOLIS â Perhaps itâs not surprising that in the second rendition of the Indiana Fever-Chicago Sky showdown, players couldnât get through another third quarter without committing another Flagrant I foul. On Sunday, Angel Reese hacked Caitlin Clark to the ground.
âItâs just a part of basketball,â Clark said afterward. âIt is what it is. She was just trying to make a play on the ball and get the block. But yeah, I mean, it happens.â
Foul by Angel Reese on Caitlin Clark upgraded to Flagrant 1 after review:
Foul by Angel Reese on Caitlin Clark upgraded to Flagrant 1 after review: pic.twitter.com/RS0LVNc4YO
â Matthew Byrne (@MatthewByrne1) June 16, 2024
Reeseâs foul was upgraded to flagrant status after an official review. Clark didnât really retaliate at all Sunday and went to take her free throws. After the Feverâs 91-83 victory, Clark didnât take offense to the hard foul on her layup. She understood that both players are competitive.
âItâs just the emotion and passion that we play with,â Clark said about the attention brought to the matchup. âLike people love to see that. I think thatâs maybe not something that was always appreciated in womenâs sports and it should be⌠weâre competitors⌠itâs going to get physical.â
Chennedy Carterâs flagrant-foul on Caitlin Clark two weeks ago
Š Jacob Musselman/ For IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK
The Fever beat the Sky 71-70 on June 1 inside Gainbridge Fieldhouse, and in the third quarter, the Skyâs Chennedy Carter hip-checked Clark on an inbounds play. An away-from-ball foul was called and it stood after an official review. Chennedy Carter refused to answer Clark questions postgame. In the coming days, the league went back and upgraded the common foul to flagrant status.
Fever head coach Christie Sides wanted that dirty hit to be upgraded in real-time though. Clark also said the flagrant wasnât basketball-like, but embraced the physicality at this level.
Another big part of that play was, it didnât look like Clarkâs teammates rushed to her help after the hard foul. Sides later chalked it up to players not looking at the routine inbounds play that eventually blew up in proportions. On Sunday though, Clark got tangled with Sky guard Dana Evans in the first quarter. They both seemed to say something to each other right after.
But it was quickly separated, and Fever guard Kristy Wallace stood in the way of Evans.
Little bit of tension here⌠looks like Chicagoâs Dana Evans and Caitlin Clark jawed at each other after the hook foul. pic.twitter.com/MHHl1msCCA
â Matthew Byrne (@MatthewByrne1) June 16, 2024
âI was really proud of how they all kept their composure,â Sides said. (About the line drawn between teammates standing up for Clark without getting technicals). âThe right call was made in that moment. Just make the right call in those moments and we can move forward⌠but when we donât make the right calls in those moments⌠thatâs when thereâs a problem.â
This Fever-Sky rivalry isnât new
Sides was asked pregame whether this matchup is an Eastern Conference rivalry in the making. The head coach spent her first six years as an assistant with the Sky and said Sunday that the rivalry has developed for awhile. Plus, the Sky were trying to snap their three-game skid.
Compared to the game weeks ago, Sundayâs contest did have some firework moments, but nothing was out of the ordinary despite Reeseâs hard foul. Clark was even asked before the Feverâs game at the Washington Mystics whether Carter owed Clark an apology. But Clark said no, she doesnât hold grudges, basketball is competitive and itâs also not always going to be nice.
Clark doubled down on that Sunday, not appearing to hold a grudge for Reese.