The WNBA Draft always brings surprises — last-minute trades, bold fashion statements, emotional moments. But this year, the biggest shocker came after the draft, when fans noticed something… strange.

Why is Caitlin Clark so popular? Exploring reasons behind Iowa point  guard's fame

One of the Top 10 picks is being accused of doing what athletes never want to be caught doing:

Lying about her height.

And not just a little. We’re talking multiple inches.
Caught in 4K. On camera. At the draft.

Why there's a basketball fan frenzy over Iowa's Caitlin Clark - OPB

The Internet Has Receipts

It all started when the league released the official measurements for its 2024 rookie class. Fans quickly noticed that the listed height for [Player Name] — who was selected in the top 10 — didn’t quite match what we’d seen during her college career… or what our eyes told us on draft night.

On paper, she’s listed at 6’2″.

But side-by-side images from the draft show her standing next to other players who are officially listed at 6’0” or 6’1” — and guess what?

She’s clearly the shorter one.

Caitlin Clark Is Just the Beginning - The Atlantic

“No way she’s 6’2”, she’s eye level with a 5’11” player,” one fan wrote on X.
“Somebody bring out the tape measure,” joked another.

College Stats vs. WNBA Reality

This isn’t the first time fans have noticed a height discrepancy. In college, her profile consistently listed her at 6’2” or even 6’3” depending on the source. But now that she’s gone pro, official WNBA media guides seem to be walking that number back.

Caitlin Clark joins rare company to hold NCAA records across men's and  women's basketball - NCAA.org

The current listed height? 6’0” flat.
So what happened to those extra two inches?

Why Players Fudge Their Height (Yes, It Happens All the Time)

Believe it or not, “height inflation” is nothing new in basketball — and it’s not always the player’s fault. Sometimes, schools bump up heights for recruiting clout. Other times, it’s agents or PR teams who suggest stretching the numbers to boost draft stock.

Iowa's Caitlin Clark just 39 points from new NCAA scoring record -  Sportsnet.ca

In fact, NBA and WNBA teams often remeasure players after they’re drafted — barefoot, under strict conditions — which is when the truth finally comes out.

“It’s not lying, it’s marketing,” one former WNBA scout said with a laugh.
“Every inch counts when you’re trying to land a top pick.”

Caitlin Clark — a 'tsunami of impact and influence' — breaks the NCAA  scoring record - OPB

What the Player Has (or Hasn’t) Said

So far, the player at the center of this controversy hasn’t commented publicly. But that hasn’t stopped fans and media from joking about the situation:

“She lied on her resume and still got the job — queen behavior.”
“A little height never hurt nobody. She’s still a baller.”

The Swagger of Caitlin Clark | The New Yorker

In the grand scheme, the height discrepancy doesn’t change her skill, talent, or potential. But it has added some unexpected buzz to her rookie year.

Final Thoughts: Measuring Up Where It Counts

Sure, getting caught fudging your height isn’t ideal — especially not in 4K, on draft night, next to players who actually measure what they say.

But at the end of the day, fans care more about what you do on the court than what it says on the roster sheet.

If she balls out? No one’s going to care whether she’s 6’2″ or 5’11”.