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A screenshot has WNBA fans asking: did a player endorse a threat towards Caitlin Clark?
The WNBA finally got people to pay attention.
Now, some of its players seem to be learning what comes with that attention.
Golden State Valkyries guard Tiffany Hayes, also known as Tip Hayes, created a stir on social media by interacting with fans who were trashing the league’s most famous player, Caitlin Clark. Hayes even appeared to laugh at one fan’s comment that seemed to imply a potential threat toward Clark.
All of this stems from a heated on-court exchange between Clark and Hayes during Friday night’s game (and subsequent postgame comments).
Clark returned from a one-game absence due to a back injury and helped the Fever beat the Valkyries, 90-82. She finished with 22 points and nine assists, while Hayes scored 19 points off the bench for Golden State.
During the third quarter, Clark drilled a deep 3-pointer from the logo while Hayes was defending. Clark appeared to say something after the shot, and Hayes responded as the two exchanged words.
That alone isn’t a major issue. Trash talk is common in sports and is part of the game. Clark is certainly no stranger to trying to get into opponents’ heads with both her play and her chirps.
But this situation didn’t end on the court.
Hayes was later caught on a hot mic before her post game media availability saying, “They’re never going to start calling a foul on her. If they did, she would never get to play in the games.”
It was not definitively clear that Hayes was referring to Clark, but given the context of the game and the online reaction to their exchange, many fans took it that way.
Then came Hayes’ social media activity.
Screenshots circulating online appear to show Hayes interacting with fans on Threads after the game. In one exchange, a fan wrote, “I talk ish, b/c you’re nvr on my teams…. but I was READY 2 support your crashOUT.”
Hayes replied, “lol that’s fair.”
Another fan wrote, “Your composure was much better than mine would’ve been, I’ll tell ya that!”
Hayes responded, “My growth is a gift and a curse but mostly a gift.”
Then came the post that drew the most attention from Clark fans.
A fan wrote, “Listen. I got some cousins we don’t speak about that will ride at dawn upon request. Just let me know.”
Hayes replied, “😂 that’s real.”
Obviously, Hayes did not directly threaten Clark. The fan didn’t explicitly name Clark in the post. But it seems more likely than not that the exchange is about the Fever’s star player. There seems to be a section of WNBA fans who really don’t like Caitlin Clark, despite everything she has done to catapult the league into relevance.
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But will the league take action against Hayes, or at the very least investigate the behavior?
The WNBA has made a public point of taking those issues seriously. In May 2025, the league launched its “No Space for Hate” platform, which it described as an effort to “combat hate and promote respect across all WNBA spaces,” including online discourse and in-arena behavior. The league said the initiative included enhanced technological features to detect hateful comments online, increased security measures, mental health resources and league-wide messaging.
The league has also shown it can move quickly when allegations are made. After a May 2025 game between the Fever and Chicago Sky, the WNBA investigated claims of racist fan behavior directed toward Angel Reese near the court. The league later said it gathered information from fans, team and arena staff, and reviewed audio and video before determining the allegations were not substantiated.
The previous season, after Connecticut Sun players spoke publicly about alleged racial comments and threatening messages during the Fever-Sun playoff series, the WNBA issued a statement saying it would not tolerate “racist, derogatory, or threatening comments” made about players, teams or anyone affiliated with the league.
So, if the WNBA is going to make “No Space for Hate” a central part of its public message, it should not be difficult to ask whether that standard applies here, too.
OutKick reached out to the WNBA to ask whether the league is aware of Hayes’ social media activity, whether it plans to review or investigate the posts and whether its social media policy applies to player interactions with fans in situations like this. The league did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The WNBA has benefited enormously from Clark’s fame. She drives ratings, sells tickets and jerseys and creates national conversation. She has brought mainstream attention to a league that spent years begging for people to care.
But that attention also means players’ actions are going to be scrutinized in ways they may not have been before.
The WNBA cannot have it both ways. It cannot cash in on the attention Clark brings and then shrug when players appear to encourage or laugh along with reckless commentary involving her.
The WNBA wanted the spotlight. Now it has it.
Some of its players might want to start acting like they know people are watching. Or, maybe, they are acting like people are watching and this is the kind of messaging they want to spread.
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Comedian recalls ‘most terrifying night’ of her life after 600-pound fridge fell on her while her kids slept
Laura Clery recalled the “most terrifying night” of her life after surviving a near-death event.
The comedian admitted her “biggest fear came true” after she was “very seriously hurt and stuck while home alone with my two young kids,” in a video shared on Instagram.
Clery, 39, praised God and thanked the first responders who rescued her after a 600-pound fridge fell and pinned her to the counter.
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Clery was in the process of getting ready for bed when the massive fridge “slammed into me and pinned me against the counter.”
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“I couldn’t move. Couldn’t breathe right,” she wrote on social media. “Was impossible to get off and I could feel myself losing consciousness. My kids were in the house. I genuinely didn’t know if I was getting out of that alive.”
“Thank God my phone was in my pocket and I was able to call 911. Thank God it didn’t fall on my kids. It took three firefighters to lift it off me. I’m still shaking.”
Clery shared clips from the rescue where firefighters carried her out of the house and into an ambulance.
From the back of the ambulance, Clery praised the first responders while wearing a neck brace and noted that she was “crushed” by a massive fridge.
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“This was right after the fentanyl hit and all of my pain [went] away (instantly),” she wrote. “I just need to say thank you to these amazing firefighters who saved my life!! Truly.
“They got there so fast, broke through my garage door, and 3 of them pushed a 600 pound fridge off of me and got me safely to the trauma unit before things got worse.”
Clery added, “I keep thinking about how differently this could have gone and I just feel overwhelming gratitude. No broken bones, my kids are okay and safe, I can walk… I’m so lucky!
“They were calm, kind and just handled everything like absolute heroes!”
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Wyndham Clark nearly makes PGA Tour history en route to victory at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson
After winning the 2023 U.S. Open, it seemed like PGA Tour player Wyndham Clark was about to vault his career into a new stratosphere. But it never quite took off the way many thought it might. On Sunday, Clark won the CJ Cup Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch, his first PGA Tour victory since February 2024. He shot 30-under for the event, beating Si Woo Kim by three shots.
There’s a common saying in golf that “some tournaments are won and some tournaments are lost.” Clark won the CJ Cup Byron Nelson by shooting a ridiculous 11-under 60 in the final round. He nearly holed out on the 72nd hole, which would have been an eagle and a round of 59. Had his final approach gone into the hole, Clark would have become the 16th player to post a sub-60 round in PGA Tour history.
Kim entered the final round with a two-shot lead over both Clark and Scottie Scheffler. Kim did his part, shooting an impressive six-under 65. But he just couldn’t keep pace with Clark’s near-historic performance. This was a tournament Clark won, not a tournament Kim lost.
The win represented a major turnaround for Clark, who missed the cut at the PGA Championship earlier in the month. He hadn’t won an event since the 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and hadn’t won a 72-hole tournament since the 2023 U.S. Open.
One month prior to that major victory, Clark earned his first win on the PGA Tour, finishing first at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship. In February 2024, Clark captured the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am by shooting a course-record 60 during the third round. The tournament’s final round was rained out, the event was shortened to 54 holes and Clark was declared the winner.
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Clark nearly won the 2024 PLAYERS Championship, finishing in a tie for second. In other words, a 29-year-old player who had not won a PGA Tour event in his life captured three titles in less than one calendar year, nearly winning a fourth, and one of the wins included a major. Clark even found himself on the 2023 U.S. Ryder Cup team.
But newfound success meant newfound expectations, not just from fans but from Clark himself. Unfortunately, the run between 2023 and 2024 didn’t carry over. The now-32-year-old Clark never came close to winning in 2025, posting just two top-10s in 24 tournaments. He missed the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open and made headlines after destroying a locker at the prestigious Oakmont Country Club in frustration.
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Clark addressed his past struggles in his post-round interview with CBS golf reporter Amanda Balionis.
This is a major step for Clark, who was left off the 2025 U.S. Ryder Cup team, but he needs to improve his performances during the season’s biggest events. While he did post a top-5 finish at the 2025 Open Championship, Clark has missed the cut in five of his past 10 major starts. The T4 at the Open represents the only top-10 he’s had in a major since the U.S. Open victory in 2023.
Clark’s next opportunity to take that step comes in the 2026 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, which starts on June 18.
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