That's the part that's most pathetic about this whole thing. It's not that stuff like Caitlin or other past greats got left off a poster....or any number of other controversies that involve the WNBA and stupid sh** that happens OFF the court.
It's that the WNBA is either willfully silent on these things, or they are just truly that incompetent as an organization and so ill-prepared for the increase in public attention that was gonna come once Caitlin Clark got in the league.
The reason you could argue BOTH is because you could absolutely make a case that they welcome any and all publicity because it keeps the WNBA in the media spotlight, even if it's not at all about the product on the floor........which to be honest is not always worth bragging about, and certain hasn't been, in a lot of ways, for most of its history.
So they are fine with letting the media run wild with debates about why someone wasn't included on a WNBA-sponsored 30th anniversary poster, rather than having a spokesperson simply squash all this immediately after speculation began, by saying certain players couldn't be included because of image rights.
They show zero initiative to get ahead on damage control with the media regarding any kind of publicity, but especially if it's negative.
Regardless of how intentional it is that they choose to either stay silent or have the reaction time of a sloth rolling through mud on a public relations/off-court issue or player issue, they truly are one of the worst-run leagues in the country.
This kind of sh** just wouldn't happen under the same circumstances in any other professional league and not even
@WDSMHawk can find a way to downplay that, even if he tries because I goaded him into it.