After Getting Dragged For Her Comments on Ratings, She Doubled Down — And It Got UGLY

 

Caitlin Clark hits back at Megyn Kelly attacking her over 'white privilege'  comments in WNBA success | Daily Mail Online

 

ESPN host Elle Duncan has officially entered the chat — and not in a good way.

After getting blasted online by fans of Caitlin Clark for downplaying the star rookie’s impact on women’s basketball viewership, Duncan decided to fire back. But instead of apologizing or clarifying, she went on a condescending, defensive rant — and made things much worse.

Let’s break down how Elle tried to “clap back,” and why the internet is calling her out all over again.

Caitlin Clark fans revisit Elle Duncan's controversial take on Fever star's  fandom dimming the spirit of the WNBA

 It Started With That Take…

On a recent ESPN segment, Elle Duncan made waves by saying:

“Caitlin Clark isn’t the reason for the ratings boom. It’s all of women’s basketball. Stop making it about one player.”

While some might agree in theory, the timing and tone of the take rubbed fans the wrong way. Why?

She went toe-to-toe with boys": Caitlin Clark's school teachers  nostalgically raving about Fever star's competitive spirit resurface

Because she said it just hours after the NCAA Championship pulled in record-breaking numbers — largely credited to Caitlin Clark’s superstardom.

Analyst Accuses Caitlin Clark of Ruining "NBA All-Star Weekend" by Refusing  to Participate - The SportsRush

And the fans let her have it:

“Be serious. Caitlin’s the reason my dad even knows there’s a women’s Final Four.”

“Elle Duncan trying so hard to erase what Caitlin’s done is embarrassing.”

“Uplifting the sport means telling the truth, not pretending everyone’s equal.”

 

ESPN host Elle Duncan says critics are getting Caitlin Clark narrative  wrong : r/wnba

 

 

 The Clapback: “Y’all Need Media Literacy”

Instead of engaging in honest conversation, Elle went live on IG and posted on X (formerly Twitter), saying:

“The way Caitlin Clark fans twisted my words is WILD.
Learn some media literacy before coming for me.”

She then doubled down, adding:

WNBA: Elle Duncan speaks out against "misogyny and racism" faced by WNBA  players during Caitlin Clark's rookie season: "Oh my god, just educate  yourself"

“I’m not apologizing for giving credit to the entire sport. One player doesn’t carry the game.”

While the message might seem fair on the surface, the tone was anything but. Fans immediately labeled it as:

Defensive

Dismissive

And most of all, condescending

 

Caitlin Clark wins Honda Cup as top female college athlete for second  consecutive year | NEWS10 ABC

 

 The Fan Response: “We’re Not Stupid, Elle.”

Clark’s fans weren’t having it:

“You said what you said. Don’t try to act like we misunderstood.”

“Telling fans they need ‘media literacy’ is literally why people don’t trust sports media.”

“You’re trying to be the smartest person in the room and ended up sounding petty.”

 

Caitlin Clark wins Honda Cup as top female college athlete for second  consecutive year - NBC Sports

 

 

Many fans pointed out that uplifting the sport and acknowledging Clark’s impact are not mutually exclusive.

One viral post said it best:

“Caitlin Clark IS helping the entire game. That’s the point. Her spotlight brings eyes to everyone — and you’re mad about it.”

Caitlin Clark wins Honda Cup as top female college athlete for second  consecutive year

 So Why The Shade?

Critics are starting to question why some media personalities seem allergic to giving Clark her flowers without adding a “BUT” at the end.

Is it:

Because she’s a white star in a league dominated by Black excellence?

Because she’s gotten more attention than ESPN veterans are used to?

Or because Clark’s popularity is organic, and not manufactured by the networks?

 

Caitlin Clark wins Honda Cup as top female college athlete for second  consecutive year | who13.com

 

 

Whatever the reason, Elle Duncan’s tone suggests this isn’t just a “basketball take” — it’s personal.

 Final Thoughts: A Missed Opportunity to Lead

 

 

Elle Duncan could’ve used this moment to elevate the entire sport — including Clark — by acknowledging what’s real:

Caitlin Clark’s popularity is not a threat. It’s a door being kicked open for everyone.

Instead, she chose to clap back with ego and condescension — and it backfired.

 

Because when a sport finally has momentum, the last thing it needs is media figures trying to dim the brightest light in the room.

What do YOU think — is Elle Duncan being unfair? Or are fans overreacting?
The WNBA season is just getting started… and the drama is already elite.