“If This Is the Generation Meant to Carry the Torch, Then Women’s Basketball Should Shut Down by Next Season.”
Larry Bird breaks decades of silence to defend Caitlin Clark — but it’s what he says about the WNBA that delivers the hardest blow.
One shove. One injured rookie. One league that looked the other way.
On July 10, Caitlin Clark — the most electrifying rookie the WNBA has ever seen — was shoved to the floor by Marina Mabrey during the Fever–Sun game. No foul. No replay. No protection.
The clip went viral within minutes. Fans saw what refs didn’t: Clark, mid-injury, blindsided with her back turned. And while outrage spread online, the league said nothing.
But silence has a way of summoning voices. And this time, it summoned Larry Bird.
“If This Is the Generation Meant to Carry the Torch, Then Women’s Basketball Should Shut Down by Next Season.”
Larry Bird breaks decades of silence to defend Caitlin Clark — but it’s what he says about the WNBA that delivers the hardest blow.
One shove. One injured rookie. One league that looked the other way.
On July 10, Caitlin Clark — the most electrifying rookie the WNBA has ever seen — was shoved to the floor by Marina Mabrey during the Fever–Sun game. No foul. No replay. No protection.
The clip went viral within minutes. Fans saw what refs didn’t: Clark, mid-injury, blindsided with her back turned. And while outrage spread online, the league said nothing.
But silence has a way of summoning voices. And this time, it summoned Larry Bird.
“That wasn’t basketball,” Bird said. “That was cowardice in a jersey.”
For nearly two decades, Bird avoided commenting on the WNBA. He had nothing to say — until now. Watching Clark, an Indiana icon in the making, get targeted without consequence pulled him back into the conversation.
“I got elbowed by Laimbeer, shoved by Rodman, slammed every night. But it was face-to-face. You earned it. This? This was someone trying to erase her.”
Bird didn’t just defend Clark. He accused the league itself.
“The problem isn’t the push. It’s what happened after. Which is… nothing. That’s not negligence. That’s complicity.”
The words hit harder than any shove. Because Bird wasn’t talking about one play. He was talking about a pattern.
“They can’t beat her on the floor. So they’re trying to beat her down until she breaks. And if the league won’t protect her, maybe it doesn’t deserve her.”
That line lit a fire. Fans rallied behind Clark. Hashtags like #ProtectCaitlin trended for days. Analysts compared it to NBA double standards. And critics pointed to the silence as proof of a league unwilling — or unable — to protect its stars.
Clark hasn’t spoken. But Bird’s message was clear: her silence doesn’t erase the reality.
“You either build around greatness… or you build around excuses. But you can’t have both.”
And then came the dagger:
“If this is the generation that’s supposed to carry the torch,” Bird warned, “then women’s basketball should shut down by next season.”
It wasn’t just a defense of Caitlin Clark. It was a verdict on the league itself.
And maybe, the harshest truth yet.