In a headline-grabbing moment that’s sending shockwaves through the basketball world, Las Vegas Aces star A’ja Wilson is under fire for a bold â and some say delusional â postgame statement. After her teamâs loss in Game 1 of the playoffs, Wilson downplayed the defeat with a controversial remark:
âWe intentionally lost Game 1 to give them a game of honor before we crush them in Game 2,â Wilson said with a loud laugh, sparking both amusement and outrage across social media.
While some fans chalked it up to gamesmanship, others criticized the comment as disrespectful â especially toward the Indiana Fever, who have been fighting hard through the postseason. But it wasnât a reporter, analyst, or angry fan who delivered the biggest clapback â it was Caitlin Clark herself.
The Fever rookie sensation, known for her calm poise and fierce competitiveness, didnât take long to respond. She posted a 7-word message on social media that instantly went viral:
âWe donât need your charity. Just heart.â
Short, sharp, and icy cold â Clarkâs words sent a clear message that the Fever aren’t here for handouts, fake narratives, or pity wins. Her reply quickly gained traction across platforms, with fans and fellow athletes praising her maturity and leadership.
Meanwhile, Wilson has remained unusually quiet since Clarkâs post, with many wondering if the Aces star might walk back her comment or double down ahead of Game 2.
As the rivalry between the Aces and the Fever heats up, one thing is clear: Game 2 just became personal. All eyes will be on Wilson and Clark â not just for their performance on the court, but for what might be said off it as well.
South Carolina womenâs basketball: Is Aâja WIlson the best womenâs basketball player ever?
Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) reacts during the second half of a WNBA basketball game against the Connecticut Sun at Michelob Ultra Arena. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Peltier-Imagn Images
On Sunday, the WNBA announced Aâja Wilson as the 2025 MVP. As the first four-time MVP in league history, itâs time to start asking if Wilson is the best womenâs basketball player ever.
This isnât a conversation about Wilson being a GOAT. Thatâs an overused term that gets thrown around any time someone has a couple of good games. There is a legitimate conversation to be had about whether Wilson is truly the best womenâs basketball player ever.
Wilson adds the 2025 MVP to her unanimous 2024 award, as well as the 2020 and 2022 crowns. She broke a tie with Sheryl Swoopes, Lisa Leslie, and Lauren Jackson, the other three-time winners.
Wilson is the first player to win consecutive MVP awards since Cynthia Cooper repeated in 1997 and 1998, the WNBAâs first two seasons. She and Cooper (1997) are the only unanimous MVPs, and itâs hard to make a serious argument against Wilsonâs 2024 season being the best season in league history.
Wilson began this season as the MVP favorite, but by August, she was an afterthought. Minnesotaâs Napheesa Collier was the runaway favorite â and deservedly so. But over the last two months of the season, Wilson went on another tear, while Collier was sidelined by an ankle injury and ended up missing a quarter of the season (11 games).
Wilson finished first in scoring (23.4) and blocks (2.3) average, second in rebounding average(10.2), and third in steals (1.6) average. She also averaged a career-high 3.1 assists and led the league in efficiency rating, besting Collier in nearly every category (Collier had 0.1 more assists).
The race ended up not being close. Wilson finished with 657 total points to beat Collier, who had 534 points. Wilson finished first or second on every ballot and got 51 of a possible 72 first-place votes. Collier had 18.
âThis one is different because my name wasnât even in conversations. Even coming off a unanimous season, it was kind of like, all right, cool. And thatâs mind-blowing to me. It seeped in a little bit, to my mindset, Iâm not going to lie, in the beginning,â Wilson said on Sunday. âLet me focus on how I can be a better teammate and a leader for this team because thatâs what we need. We donât necessarily need MVP all the time.â
(WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert and Wilsonâs boyfriend Bam Adebayo actually presented the award to Wilson on Friday, in front of the entire Aces team and camera crews. Keeping that secret for two days may be the most impressive part of this story.)
Comparing athletes across eras is never an apples-to-apples comparison because of changes in rules, tactics, technologies, and the like.
It is especially apples to oranges for womenâs basketball, since there were two or three generations of American players who never had a domestic league to play in, or were already on the back end of their careers when the WNBA started play in 1997
That being said, Wilson is the only player in WNBA history to average at least 20 points, 10 rebounds, two assists, two blocks, and one steal for an entire season. And she has done it twice.
Wilson has two of the top three scoring seasons and two of the top three rebounding seasons in WNBA history. She also has three of the top five seasons in player efficiency rating.
To be fair, the WNBA season has grown from 28 games in 1997 to 44 games this year. The Cynthia Coopers of history didnât have a chance to put up similar totals.
But Wilsonâs per-game averages still put her at the top. She holds the single-season (26.9) and career (21.4) scoring average records, along with the single-game record (53). Wilson also has the only 30-point, 20-rebound game in WNBA history and is the career leader in player efficiency.
Dawn Staley was Wilsonâs college coach, and the two share a special relationship. They relentlessly needle each other and make good-natured jokes at the otherâs expense. But they are also very close, and part of the reason Wilson is the player she is today is because Staley pushed her relentlessly in college.
Staley also happens to be an all-time great player, and she was teammates with Swoopes and Leslie, and played against Jackson. Does she think Wilson is the greatest player ever?
âEver? I mean, sheâs got one more than everybody else, right?â Staley said. âUm. Ever? Sheâs got an MVP for half of the seasons that sheâs been in the league. I donât think thatâs ever been done. Sheâs the best in the world, for sure. Sheâs the very best in the world.â
But Iâve buried the lede.
Wilson is only 29 and has played just eight seasons. Sheâs only a couple of years into her prime, with four or five more years to go, and she gets better every season (this year, Wilson added a three-point shot and hit 42.4% from behind the arc).
Wilson is third in career 20-point games, less than 100 behind Diana Taurasi despite playing nearly 300 fewer games. She needs 17 more 30-point games to catch Taurasi, again, despite playing nearly 300 fewer games.
Wilson has the fifth-most career double-doubles, 81 behind Tina Charlesâ record, despite playing 200 fewer games.
Wilson is already top ten in career free throws made, free throws attempted, and blocks. She is top 20 for career rebounds and 21st in career points.
âBy the time itâs all said and done, she will be the greatest to ever do it,â Becky Hammon, Wilsonâs current coach, told ESPNâs Michael Voepel. âFour [MVPs] already says she is. In a league that has continued to get much better, she keeps getting better. Youâre watching poetry in motion. Youâre watching history. And sheâs just 29 years old. She could win four more of these by the time she is finished.â
Itâs also mind-boggling to think that Wilson may be one very suspicious ballot away from having five MVPs and four straight.
In 2023, Breanna Stewart won a controversial MVP vote. It was controversial because Stewart had fewer first-place votes than Alyssa Thomas and fewer second-place votes than Wilson. But one voter listed Wilson fourth.
It was the only ballot that didnât have Wilson, Stewart, and Thomas as the top three, and with just 13 points separating the top three, it may have cost Wilson the award.
Wilson claims to know who the voter was, but he or she has never come forward. Two years later, it looks more than ever like a deliberate attempt by someone to deprive Wilson.
Hypotheticals aside, Wilson still stands alone. She said on Sunday that the reality hasnât sunk in yet.
âItâs probably not going to hit me until the end of the season, honestly, because Iâm thinking about a million things,â she said. âBut it is truly a blessing to be able to be where I am. I donât think I could ever put into words how special this moment is, how special this moment hopefully is for the W moving forward. I was a young girl that didnât even like this sport. I didnât want to play it. I donât like to sweat. But now my nameâs in the history books forever. When Iâm thinking of those nights and those day when (itâs) 6:00 am in the morning and Iâm like âOh my god, why am I doing this?â This is my why. To sit here today and say Iâm the only (four-time MVP). These are the moments that I say this is why you wake up every morning and do what you do.â