Jemele Hill quietly deletes Caitlin Clark’s post after stalker’s arrest

Police arrested a man on Sunday accused of stalking WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark. The details of the alleged harassment are disturbing.

As OutKick reported Monday, “the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office alleged the man sent the Indiana Fever star numerous threats and sexually explicit messages through his social media accounts” before attempt to physically contact Clark while traveling to Indianapolis.

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So how does Jemele Hill fit into all of this? Well, in September, Hill posted a lengthy message on

Except no other WNBA player has seen a man arrested because he was “very concerned about [their] security.” Clark did it.

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark smiles as she looks at the team bench after making a pass to the basket that led to a score in the second half of a WNBA basketball game against the Dallas Wings on Sunday, September 1, 2024, in Arlington, Texas. . (AP Photo/Tony Gutiérrez)

Today, several Chicago Sky players, including Angel Reese, claimed a man “harassed” them and used racial slurs during an alleged incident in June. But there is no proof of what happened, especially as Sky players claim.

And while Reese and the rest of Chicago’s WNBA players were eager to take to social media and claim that they were victims of harassment that may or may not have occurred, Clark never mentioned publicly that she had flown a man from Texas to Indianapolis. to try to confront her.

It appears that Clark was the victim of harassment unlike any other WNBA player. And remember, he’s just the only man we know because he took things to the extreme and had to be stopped. Who knows how many other people are harassing Clark on social media?

Granted, we won’t hear about it from Clark, who never talks about the “hate” she receives, even though many of her WNBA colleagues like to constantly talk about their “haters.”

So Jemele Hill apologized and admitted she was wrong, right? Well, not quite.

Instead, Hill tried to quietly delete the message and pretend she never sent it. Fortunately, social media and the Internet never forget.

Former ESPN host Jemele Hill deleted a tweet regarding Caitlin Clark. (D Dipasupil/Getty Images for Advertising Week New York)

Hill is not alone. The majority of the media spent Clark’s entire rookie season in the WNBA telling the star that she needed to speak out to defend her black teammates and opponents against online “hate.”

But has anyone asked Clark about the “hate” she faces daily? No, they were far more concerned about black and LGBTQ players and their feelings than they were about Clark’s physical safety.

Hill was given the opportunity to stand out from the crowd and issue an apology to correct his previous statement.

Police arrested a man on Sunday accused of stalking WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark (right). (Getty Images/IMAGNE)

Unfortunately, it’s like the rest of sports media; they’ve decided that Caitlin Clark is incapable of being a victim – even when she’s literally the victim of a crime – because she’s white and black women in the WNBA are perpetual victims – even when they’re not. are actually victims of nothing.

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