WATCH: Caitlin Clark Leaves Game After Rough Contact, Back Injury
Caitlin Clark ended up at the center of another rough night in the WNBA.
During Indiana’s game against the Phoenix Mercury, Clark took heavy contact in a sequence that quickly set off a fresh wave of debate online. Social media clips shared after the play showed a hard collision that sent Clark to the floor, and viewers were split on whether the officials let too much go.
Clark has dealt with plenty of physical play since entering the league, and this game added more fuel to that argument. Some fans say the WNBA needs to do a better job protecting its biggest star. Others say physical basketball is part of the game and Clark is getting the same treatment everyone else gets.
Either way, the attention around the play was immediate.
NEW: WNBA star Caitlin Clark gets blindsided to the ground after getting fouled.
Clark was apparently hit in the eye before getting knocked to the ground by Connecticut Sun player Marina Mabrey.
A lot of jealousy going on in the WNBA. pic.twitter.com/tUfyc9dXuA
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 18, 2025
The online clips also brought back memories of earlier games where Clark absorbed repeated contact and the conversation around officiating got loud again. That has become a familiar pattern this season. When Clark gets hit, the reaction does not stay on the court for long.
https://x.com/cc22hawkeye/status/2069937150099910678?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
By the second half, Clark left the game with a back injury. That is the part that matters most. The league can argue about intent, contact, and physical play all day long. But when the biggest name in the sport walks off hurt, people notice.
https://x.com/JonnyRoot_/status/2069956787160453478?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
And in the age of instant video, every hard foul gets replayed, clipped, and argued over within minutes. That puts even more pressure on the WNBA to show it can keep control of games and protect its stars.
https://x.com/BlameVenom/status/2069957417777910102?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
For now, the big question is simple. How serious is the injury, and how soon can Clark get back on the floor?

