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Welcome back to Deep Cover. This episode, I'm joined by my friend Sara Kiesler to discuss the way that the WNBA is covered.
We open with the Azzi Fudd–Paige Bueckers situation in Dallas — not the gossip, but what the Wings' PR response revealed about how media still struggles to cover a league with its own distinct culture. From there, the conversation goes deeper: the on-court fit question around the number one pick, what it means to cover a sapphic league with NBA instincts, and why the drama-first approach cheats fans out of real basketball analysis.
The two also dig into the Natasha Cloud situation and whether her outspoken advocacy — on Palestine and beyond — has made her untouchable in a league increasingly bankrolled by billionaires. Sara pushes back on the pessimism, making the case that this is still an activist league at its core, and that the players themselves won't let it become anything else.
Plus: WNBA season predictions, the Angel Reese trade to Atlanta, why the Fever remain the most conflicting team in the league, and a closing take on the NCAA Tournament's expansion to 76 teams — and who it's really designed to serve.
By Omar ZahranWelcome back to Deep Cover. This episode, I'm joined by my friend Sara Kiesler to discuss the way that the WNBA is covered.
We open with the Azzi Fudd–Paige Bueckers situation in Dallas — not the gossip, but what the Wings' PR response revealed about how media still struggles to cover a league with its own distinct culture. From there, the conversation goes deeper: the on-court fit question around the number one pick, what it means to cover a sapphic league with NBA instincts, and why the drama-first approach cheats fans out of real basketball analysis.
The two also dig into the Natasha Cloud situation and whether her outspoken advocacy — on Palestine and beyond — has made her untouchable in a league increasingly bankrolled by billionaires. Sara pushes back on the pessimism, making the case that this is still an activist league at its core, and that the players themselves won't let it become anything else.
Plus: WNBA season predictions, the Angel Reese trade to Atlanta, why the Fever remain the most conflicting team in the league, and a closing take on the NCAA Tournament's expansion to 76 teams — and who it's really designed to serve.