Angel Reese Was Sure She’d Make the All-Star Team — Until One Comment Changed Everything
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She walked into the league with swagger.
NIL deals. Millions of followers. March Madness glow.
She was the face of “what’s next” in women’s basketball.
But this week?
Angel Reese got the news she never expected.
She didn’t make the All-Star roster.
And now, the fallout is turning into one of the most explosive moments of the WNBA season.
THE ANNOUNCEMENT: CLARK’S IN. REESE IS OUT. AND THE INTERNET FROZE.
On Tuesday afternoon, the WNBA released its All-Star Game selections.
Headlining the list:
– A’ja Wilson
– Breanna Stewart
– Nneka Ogwumike
– Caitlin Clark
But one name missing sent shockwaves through the league:
Angel Reese.
Despite being one of the league’s top rebounders, a defensive presence, and arguably the most talked-about rookie besides Clark—Reese didn’t make the cut.
“She was stunned,” said one insider close to the Sky.
“She thought she had done enough. And she’s not wrong.”
THE RESPONSE: ANGEL DIDN’T STAY QUIET—BUT SHE DIDN’T NEED TO YELL, EITHER
Hours later, a now-deleted tweet appeared on Reese’s feed:
“I know what this is. Don’t worry. I’m watching too.”
It wasn’t anger.
It wasn’t shock.
It was something more dangerous: focus.
On Instagram, she followed up with a workout clip, captioned:
“All-Star or not, I’m still that one.”
And in a post-practice interview, she offered a single sentence that said everything:
“I’m not asking to be liked. I’m asking to be respected.”
THE INTERNET MELTDOWN: #REESESNUBBED VS #CLARKDESERVEDIT
Within minutes, Twitter exploded.
Hashtags like #ReeseWasRobbed, #AllStarGate, and #WNBABias trended.
One fan posted:
“They want her confidence, her personality, her image… just not her in the spotlight.”
Another shot back:
“This isn’t about popularity. It’s about numbers. Clark earned her spot.”
And just like that, the Clark–Reese rivalry was reignited.
THE LEAGUE’S EXPLANATION—AND THE BACKLASH THAT FOLLOWED
The WNBA issued a brief statement:
“All-Star selections are determined by a combination of fan vote, coach input, and performance metrics. We stand by the process.”
But that didn’t calm the storm.
“You can’t build a league on culture and then snub the player who embodies it,” one media analyst said.
Even Jemele Hill chimed in:
“You don’t get to market ‘Black femininity meets power’ and then leave Angel Reese out of the party.”
LOCKER ROOM REACTIONS: CHICAGO SKY PLAYERS DON’T SAY MUCH—BUT SAY ENOUGH
While the team has not released a statement, players like Dana Evans and Marina Mabrey posted cryptic messages hours after the news.
“They know. We know.”
“Not surprised. Just disappointed.”
Sources say the locker room is tight behind Reese—and furious.
“They feel she’s carrying more than minutes on the court,” said one insider.
“She’s carrying the culture. And they just told her that’s not enough.”
THE MEDIA SPLIT: PRAISE VS POLITICS
Fox Sports’ Jason Whitlock:
“She didn’t earn it. This isn’t Instagram—it’s basketball.”
ESPN’s Chiney Ogwumike:
“She’s polarizing. And that’s exactly what the league needs.”
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR REESE: THE SECOND HALF OF HER SEASON JUST GOT PERSONAL
Sources close to Reese say she’s now locked in.
“This lit a fire,” one teammate said.
“She’s coming for everyone who voted her out.”
And Angel herself hinted at it with one last post:
“Watch what I do next.”
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR THE WNBA: THE SPOTLIGHT’S GETTING HOT
The Reese–Clark divide isn’t going away.
If anything?
It’s turning into the defining narrative of the season.
Two rookies.
Two fanbases.
Two visions of what the league could become.
And now, one of them’s got a chip on her shoulder the size of the All-Star trophy.
FINAL THOUGHT: THE MOST DANGEROUS PLAYER ISN’T ALWAYS THE ONE WHO MADE THE ROSTER
Angel Reese didn’t get the All-Star nod.
But what she got instead?
Might be more powerful.
Fuel.
Narrative.
And the kind of public backing the league can’t afford to keep ignoring.
Because one thing’s clear:
You can leave Angel Reese off a list…
But you won’t keep her out of the headlines.