When Dawn Staley speaks, the basketball world doesn’t just listen – it stops. The legendary coach, a pioneer who has raised banners, mentored Olympians, and transformed women’s basketball, recently dropped a bold proclamation that shook the WNBA and beyond.

👉 If she had to pick Athlete of the Year today, her choice would not be Caitlin Clark, not A’ja Wilson, not Breanna Stewart. It would be Angel Reese.

And Staley didn’t hesitate to explain why.

“Her talent goes beyond the WNBA. She’s not just a stat line. She’s an energy, a force, a presence that changes the game the moment she steps on the floor.” – Dawn Staley

Dawn Staley’s Words Carry Weight

To understand the magnitude of this statement, you need to understand who Dawn Staley is. A Hall of Famer, Olympic gold medalist, and national championship coach at South Carolina, Staley is more than just another basketball mind. She’s a cultural architect, a mentor whose word can elevate careers and reshape narratives.

When she anoints Reese as Athlete of the Year “today”, it isn’t just casual praise. It’s a stamp of legitimacy from one of the most respected figures in the sport.

Staley has coached stars like A’ja Wilson, Aliyah Boston, and Dawn stalwarts who’ve dominated at every level. For her to single out Reese now is nothing short of a declaration: Angel Reese is the heartbeat of women’s basketball.

Beyond Numbers: The Reese Effect

In today’s basketball, analytics dominate the conversation. Points per game, shooting splits, win shares, efficiency ratings – every number is scrutinized. Caitlin Clark, with her deep threes and record-breaking stat lines, thrives in this numbers-driven era.

But Staley made it clear: Angel Reese’s value can’t be captured in a spreadsheet.

Rebounding force: Reese crashes the glass like it’s personal. Every possession she fights for feels like a statement.

Defensive anchor: She bodies opponents, making every shot attempt a war.

Emotional spark: Her celebrations, her glare, her intensity – they shift momentum and force fans to feel the game.

Staley’s point is simple: “Greatness isn’t just what shows up in the box score. It’s what opponents fear, what teammates feed off, and what fans never forget.”

“Protect Angel Reese at All Costs”

Alongside her praise, Staley dropped another bombshell:

“We, the Black athlete community, should protect Angel Reese at all costs.”

This wasn’t just basketball commentary. It was cultural, political, and personal.

Reese has been under the microscope since LSU’s NCAA championship run, when her taunting gesture at Caitlin Clark went viral. Overnight, she became a polarizing figure. To some, she was “classless.” To others, she was unapologetically authentic.

Staley sees that backlash for what it is – a double standard. Male athletes are praised for swagger; Reese was vilified. By calling for protection, Staley aligned herself with a larger movement: defending athletes of color who are judged more harshly than their peers.

The Caitlin Clark Factor

No conversation about Reese can escape the shadow of Caitlin Clark. Their rivalry has become the defining narrative of women’s basketball, from the NCAA to the WNBA.

Clark: a scoring phenom, breaking rookie records, hailed as the future of the league.

Reese: a warrior on the boards, thriving on grit, toughness, and charisma.

Clark draws headlines with jaw-dropping shots. Reese dominates through relentless hustle. One dazzles; the other disrupts.

Staley’s endorsement of Reese as Athlete of the Year today implicitly pushes back against the idea that Clark’s stats alone should guarantee her the crown. It suggests something deeper: cultural resonance matters.

And social media exploded. Clark’s supporters accused Staley of bias. Reese’s fans roared in celebration. Once again, the rivalry fueled the very attention the WNBA has been craving for years.

Angel Reese defends hitting Caitlin Clark in head, resulting in flagrant  foul: 'It's a basketball play'

Reese’s Influence Beyond the Court

Why would Staley insist Reese’s talent “goes beyond the WNBA”? Because it does.

Pop culture presence: Reese has appeared in magazines, commercials, and music videos. She’s as comfortable on the runway as she is on the baseline.

Cultural voice: She hasn’t hesitated to speak about race, respect, and representation in sports. Her voice is sharp, unapologetic, and resonant.

Role model: For countless young girls – particularly Black girls – Reese embodies toughness and self-belief. She’s proof that you don’t have to shrink yourself to be accepted.

In this sense, Reese is more than an athlete. She’s a brand, a movement, a statement.

Athlete of the Year: Redefining the Criteria

What does “Athlete of the Year” mean? Traditionally, it’s gone to those with jaw-dropping stats or championship hardware. But Staley is challenging that definition.

Should the award celebrate the player with the best numbers? Or should it honor the one who changed the conversation, inspired the next generation, and forced the sport into cultural relevance?

By naming Reese her choice today, Staley argues for the latter.

It’s not a slight to Clark, Wilson, or Stewart. It’s a reframing of greatness itself.

Fan Reactions: A Nation Divided

Within minutes of Staley’s comments, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and TikTok lit up.

Reese supporters: “Coach Staley said what needed to be said. Angel is the soul of this game.”

Clark defenders: “This is crazy. Caitlin is rewriting record books and somehow gets overlooked? Stop the madness.”

Neutral voices: “We’re lucky to witness both. Can we not pit them against each other every time?”

The reactions only fueled the narrative: Reese vs Clark isn’t just a rivalry. It’s a culture war, a media battle, and the storyline that might carry the WNBA into its golden age.

Angel Reese on Caitlin Clark - We 'don't hate each other' - ESPN

The Road Ahead for Reese

Angel Reese’s journey is only beginning. She’s a rookie, still growing her game, still learning the pro level. Yet she already commands the type of attention most veterans never see.

If she can continue to refine her offensive skillset, expand her range, and stay consistent, Reese has the potential to become not just a star, but a legend. With Staley’s blessing, that future feels even more inevitable.

And beyond the court, her ceiling is limitless. From endorsements to activism, Reese has the power to shape culture the way Serena Williams once did in tennis.

Final Takeaway

Dawn Staley’s proclamation wasn’t just a headline. It was a challenge – to fans, to media, to the sports world.

It asked: What do we value in our athletes? Numbers, or impact? Statistics, or soul?

For Staley, the answer was clear. Angel Reese embodies the spirit of the game, the fight of the community, and the future of women’s sports.

Love her or hate her, one thing is undeniable: Reese is bigger than basketball.

And with Dawn Staley’s endorsement, she may just be the Athlete of the Year – today, tomorrow, and beyond.