“This Changes Everything”: Christine Brennan’s Explosive Book Exposes WNBA’s Secrets, Snubs, and Smears Against Caitlin Clark

 

From eye gouges to Olympic betrayal, veteran journalist Christine Brennan pulls no punches in a tell-all that reveals a league unprepared for its biggest star—and seemingly willing to sabotage her rise.

What if the most explosive story in sports wasn’t a game—but a book? That’s exactly what’s rocking the WNBA this week after legendary journalist Christine Brennan dropped bombshell revelations about systemic hostility, backstage politics, and racially tinged backlash surrounding rising superstar Caitlin Clark.

Brennan’s new book—so controversial that her publisher waived the usual proposal process—is already sending shockwaves through the league. And it hasn’t even hit shelves yet.

A Reporter Who Refused to Stay Quiet

Christine Brennan has been a trusted voice in sports for decades. But now, she’s the reporter the WNBA desperately wishes would go away. Known for her Olympic coverage and decades-long commitment to journalistic integrity, Brennan found herself persona non grata the moment she started asking tough questions about Clark’s treatment—particularly after the infamous DJ Carrington eye poke incident.

Brennan didn’t just speculate. She confronted Carrington directly.

“Did you do it on purpose?” she asked.

That simple question unleashed a storm. The WNBA Players Association reportedly tried to have Brennan’s credentials revoked. But instead of backing down, she doubled down.

The Eye Gouge That Unleashed a Movement

It was the viral moment seen around the basketball world: Carrington’s fingers grazing across Clark’s eye. Many chalked it up to an accident. Brennan wanted to know more. When she dared to ask Carrington about intent, league insiders tried to silence her.

“They wanted to ban me,” Brennan said in an interview with the Adam Gold Show. “That failed miserably, because this is still the United States of America.”

Her book details not just that moment, but the chilling reaction that followed—from league offices, from team coaches, and even from Olympic selectors.

The Olympic Snub Heard ‘Round the World

One of the most damning revelations in Brennan’s exposé centers around Caitlin Clark’s exclusion from the Team USA Olympic roster. According to Brennan, this wasn’t just a basketball decision—it was political.

Clark was left off the team, despite being the most popular and marketable player in the game, and despite leading all rookies in points and assists. Brennan claims head coach Cheryl Reeve—who has publicly made snide remarks about Clark—played a quiet but key role in influencing the decision.

“Officially, Cheryl wasn’t on the selection committee,” Brennan told Gold. “But she’s the coach of the team. We weren’t born yesterday.”

Brennan also called out Reeve’s social media activity, including tweets that appeared to blame Clark for her own team’s lack of TV coverage. “That alone should have been nipped in the bud by the Olympic committee,” Brennan said. “It never was.”

A League Unprepared for Stardom

Perhaps the book’s most stinging critique is aimed not at players, but at the WNBA itself. Brennan argues that the league was woefully unprepared for what Clark’s rise meant—both culturally and commercially.

“You have a 74% Black league, understandably ignored for years,” Brennan said. “And now a white woman from Iowa comes in and draws massive attention. That tension is real. But the league needed to manage it, not fuel it.”

Rather than embracing Clark as a unifier, Brennan alleges that internal politics and resentment turned her into a target.

Reporting the Truth—Not Protecting Feelings

Brennan’s refusal to play nice has made her both a hero and a villain. But for her, it’s not about personal allegiance. It’s about integrity.

“These are questions I would have asked any male athlete,” she said. “Are we saying in 2024 that women can’t be asked the same questions we ask men?”

The backlash against Brennan raises uncomfortable truths about the WNBA’s media culture. If reporters are punished for asking honest questions, what does that say about the league’s commitment to transparency?

What Comes Next

Brennan’s book—whose title has not yet been publicly released—is expected to hit shelves within weeks. Pre-orders are already spiking. Fans, media, and league executives alike are bracing for impact.

If early excerpts and interviews are any indication, the book will be more than just a chronicle of Clark’s rookie year. It will be a referendum on how the WNBA handled the moment it had waited decades for—and how it nearly fumbled it entirely.

Brennan ends her public interviews with a message that’s as sharp as her reporting: “This was the moment. The rising tide that lifts all boats. And instead of riding it, some people tried to sink the ship.”

The question now isn’t just what Brennan revealed. It’s what the WNBA will do about it.

Will they continue to dismiss criticism and double down on dysfunction? Or will they finally recognize that protecting their stars, embracing tough questions, and confronting uncomfortable truths is the only way forward?

Time—and Brennan’s pages—will tell.

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