With Caitlin Clark returning from an injury-plagued 2025 season, the Indiana Fever’s dream of marching toward their second WNBA title and their first since 2012 looks promising.
After losing their first game to the Dallas Wings, the Fever went on a tear, winning four of five to reach 4-2.
However, the West Coast road trip, during which the Fever lost to the Golden State Valkyries and Portland Fire, not only brought them down to 4-4 but also fueled rumors that Clark and Stephanie White were out of sync after a heated debate between the two.
Why Stephanie White Defended Her Viral Spat With Caitlin Clark
White set the record straight on Monday ahead of Indiana’s practice session. The veteran coach, who led the Fever to the 2015 WNBA Finals, defended her actions following Saturday’s viral in-huddle moment against the Fire.
White said she was only trying to motivate Clark to step up and help the team overcome the big deficit.
“I think what happened in that moment is I was challenging a player. It’s coaching, is what it is,” White said. “I don’t think it often becomes an issue if you’re watching it in men’s sports most of the time. But my relationship with Caitlin is great. I love Caitlin. I ride with her.”
The 48-year-old noted that their competitive and stubborn personas emerged in that sequence, and she viewed it as a way to motivate each other and help one another for a common purpose: to win a championship.
“She wants to be coached, and I want her to help me be a better coach,” White said of Clark. “We’re both competitive. We’re both stubborn. We’re more alike than different, and hopefully we continue to bring the best out of each other.”
The Fever lost to the Fire by 16, dropping them to fourth in the Eastern Conference standings. The defeat was further magnified when a clip of the incident surfaced on various media platforms and went viral.
Several sports personalities, including Hall of Famers Sue Bird and Cheryl Miller, shared their views on the issue.
However, White noted that such intense moments are normal in a coach-player relationship, but that Clark is a viral personality and that social media quickly captures the moment and posts it on its platforms to earn money through clicks.
“This is not a new thing. It’s just new because everything that (Clark) does gets clicks. That’s how everybody makes money,” White said.
“When there was player confrontation, slash tension, slash coaching, 10 years ago when I was doing this, it wasn’t on social media. That was just getting started. It happens in every sport. It happens in all walks of life, so this is not anything that’s new, and it’s not a story.”
The Fever hope to end a two-game losing skid on Thursday night when they host Angel Reese and the Eastern Conference-leading Atlanta Dream.
