Former Chiefs Lineman Jumps Into WNBA Firestorm With Blunt Take

As controversy swirls around a game-altering incident, a former NFL player challenges media narratives and calls for greater accountability in the WNBA.

The fallout from Wednesday’s Fever-Mercury game didn’t stop with the final buzzer.

Indiana star Caitlin Clark was hit in the throat by Phoenix forward Alyssa Thomas during a scramble for a loose ball in the second quarter, a play that came with Clark on the floor and did not draw a foul in the moment. Clark later left in the third quarter because of a back injury, and Phoenix finished off a 111-109 win.

On Thursday, the WNBA stepped in with discipline, suspending Thomas for one game and fining her $1,000 for a Flagrant 2 foul on Clark. That decision has only widened the debate around the play, with some rushing to defend Thomas.

Former NFL guard Geoff Schwartz wasn’t having it.

“Has anyone outside of Lisa Leslie in the WNBA TV media sphere defended Clark. Or at least discussed how that wasn’t a basketball play?

Put any blame on Thomas at all? Just seems like everyone is finding ways to make that play seem normal or making Thomas a victim.

Seems odd. Like we all see the video.

We’ve all watched ball,” Schwartz tweeted on Sunday.

Schwartz, who was drafted by the Carolina Panthers in the seventh round in 2008, spent four years with the team. He later played the 2012 season with the Minnesota Vikings, the 2013 season with the Kansas City Chiefs, and two seasons with the New York Giants before retiring in February 2017.

Clark and the Fever are back in action Monday against the Las Vegas Aces, with tipoff set for 7 p.m. ET at T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada.

Indiana enters that matchup at 11-8 after a 111-87 win over the LA Sparks on Saturday. Before facing the Fever, the Aces will play the New York Liberty and the Chicago Sky.

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