Angel Reese defends gesture directed towards Caitlin Clark after LSU national title win; calls out double standard after being 'unapologetically' her
LSU star Angel Reese defended the gesture she aimed at Iowa Hawkeyesâ Caitlin Clark near the end of the Tigersâ first NCAA womenâs basketball national
LSU star Angel Reese defended the gesture she aimed at Iowa Hawkeyesâ Caitlin Clark near the end of the Tigersâ first NCAA womenâs basketball national championship victory on Sunday, saying âI donât take disrespect lightly.â Reese could be seen approaching Clark before moving her open hand in front of her face â popularized by WWE star John Cena to mean âyou canât see meâ â before pointing to her ring finger in a gesture some interpreted as a reference to the place her newly-acquired championship ring might sit. Clark made a similar gesture to another player earlier in the tournament. The gesture has sparked much debate, especially on social media. Some have criticized Reese, while others have defended her actions, highlighting how there was no public outrage in response to Clarkâs gesture earlier in the tournament. Sports journalist Jose de Jesus Ortiz called Reeseâs actions âclassless,â while former ESPN host Keith Olbermann called Reese an âidiotâ for the gesture. In the press conference after the victory, Reese referenced the difference in reaction she received as a result of her gesture as compared to the one Clark received. Caitlin Clark did the "You can't see me" gesture earlier in the NCAA tournament. From ESPN âAll year, I was critiqued for who I was. I donât fit the narrative,â Reese said. âI donât fit the box that yâall want me to be in. Iâm too hood. Iâm too ghetto. Yâall told me that all year. But when other people do it, and yâall donât say nothing. âSo this is for the girls that look like me. For those that want to speak up for what they believe in. Itâs unapologetically you. And thatâs what I did it for tonight. It was bigger than me tonight. And Twitter is going to go into a rage every time. âAnd Iâm happy.
I feel like Iâve helped grow womenâs basketball this year. (âŚ) Iâm looking forward to celebrating and then next season.â Reese had 15 points and 10 rebounds in the 102-85 victory and won the womenâs March Madnessâ Most Outstanding Player award. In the post-game broadcast, Reese referenced the similar gesture Clark made to a Louisville opponent in the Elite Eight. In the same game, Clark said to an opponent: âYouâre down by 15 points. Shut up,â according to the Bleacher Report. âCaitlin Clark is a hell of a player but I donât take disrespect lightly,â Reese said. âShe disrespected [LSUâs] Alexis [Morris] (âŚ) and I wanted to pick her pocket. But I had a moment at the end of her game. I was in my bag, I was in my moment.â After the Championship game, Clark herself said she didnât notice anything at the time. âI was just trying to get to the handshake line and shake hands and be grateful that my team was in that position,â Clark said in the post-game press conference. âAll the credit in the world to LSU. They were tremendous. They deserve it. They had a tremendous season. â(LSU head coach) Kim Mulkey coached them so, so well. Sheâs one of the best basketball coaches of all time, and it shows. She only said really kind things to me in the handshake line, so Iâm very grateful of that too. âBut honestly I have no idea. I was just trying to spend the last few moments on the court with especially the five people that Iâve started 93 games with and relishing every second of that.â LSU head coach Mulkey said she had âno clueâ about what transpired. In pictures: LSU wins national title in women's basketball 24 photos LSU players celebrate after winning the national championship game on Sunday, April 2.
