
Caitlin Clark hit in face, shoved to floor during wild WNBA altercation
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Both teams continued to argue while referees tried to keep everyone apart and sort out the testy situation.
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Clark, Mabrey and Charles were assessed technical fouls while Sheldon was handed a flagrant 1 for the play.
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After the game, crew chief Ashley Gloss said Sheldon was issued a flagrant because the initial foul was 'unnecessary' and that 'the contact to the face carried a potential for injury.'
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Gloss also said 'the contact made by Mabrey did not rise to the level of an ejection' and that it 'did not meet the criteria for a flagrant foul penalty two.'
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Tensions understandably remained high for the rest of the contest, which saw Indiana's Sophie Cunningham commit a hard foul on Sheldon with under a minute to play and the game well out of hand.
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The chippiness continues at the end of Fever-Sun 😳
Sophie Cunningham with a hard foul on Jacy Sheldon, who took exception to it. pic.twitter.com/EDdnYx8LLw
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) June 18, 2025
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The takedown prompted both sides to clash under the Fever basket as refs again had to step in to separate them.
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In the end, the Fever won the game 88-71 in Clark's second contest back after a quad injury knocked her out of action for several games.
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After the game, Fever coach Stephanie White shared a harsh criticism of the officiating crew.
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'When the officials don't get control of the ballgame, when they allow that stuff to happen, and it's been happening all season long … you've got competitive women who are the best in the world at what they do, and when you allow them to play physical, and you allow these things to happen, they're going to compete, and they're going to have their teammates backs,' White told reporters.
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'It's exactly what you expect out of fierce competition. I started talking to the officials in the first quarter, and we knew this was going to happen. You could tell it was going to happen. So they got to get control of it. They got to be better.'
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Inside Casey O'Brien's bedroom closet at home in Martha's Vineyard, Mass., you'll find several pieces of paper, some with words and others with pictures, taped to the inside of the door. They're a visual reminder of everything she wants to achieve in hockey, and a glimpse of what she's working toward every time she opens the closet door. As she checked goals one off the list, she'd move each slip of paper from one side of the closet to the opposite. Earning a Division 1 college hockey scholarship? She checked that off when she went to the University of Wisconsin. Making the Under-18 Women's World Championship? O'Brien did that twice, and won gold with Team USA in 2018. Winning a national championship? She did that three times in five seasons with the University of Wisconsin Badgers, including this past season. Winning the Patty Kazmaier Award as the best player in college hockey? She was finally able to cross that goal off the list in her 5th year of college. 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