Monday night was a watershed moment in Womenās college basketball. You missed out if you didnāt watch Iowa vs LSU in the facing-off for a chance to go to the Final Four.
But as we expected the conversation coming out of this game was more about what did not happen on the courtāas Angel Reese discussed after their loss to Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes.
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During the postgame press conference, she gave sports fans a peek into what sheās been going through since she won the National Championship a year ago against the same Iowa Hawkeyes.
āIāve been through so much,ā Reese said. āIāve seen so much. Iāve been attacked so many times, death threats, Iāve been sexualized, Iāve been threatened, Iāve been so many things, and Iāve stood strong every single time.ā
On Tuesday, FS1 commentator Emmanuel Ahco took an ignorant stance on Reeseās words during his show, āSpeak.ā
Listen to what he said below:
First and foremost, saying that you plan on taking a āgender-neutralā and āracially indifferentā take on Reese immediately disqualifies anything you say after that.
Why? It ignores the factors that have directly affected the way people treat her. People have sexualized her because sheās a woman, they label her as aggressive because sheās Black.
Itās why itās frustrating when certain groups say āthey donāt see colorā when talking about Black people. You absolutely should, because people have used the color of our skin to marginalize and discriminate against us for hundreds. The same can be said with Reese.
Acho also claimed during this segment that Reese, āCanāt act like the big bad wolf, then cry like courage the cowardly dog.ā
So youāre saying Reese deserves to be sexualized? Threatened?
As Torrey Smith said on X, āShe never asked for sympathy on the court. She just asked to be treated like a human off of it.ā
Which is why Achoās comments are so asinine. Reese wasnāt complaining about the way people talked about her on the basketball court, she was talking about the way she is being treated off it, in the real world.
If Acho wanted to criticize her game, I couldāve lived with that, even if I sorely disagreed. But criticizing the way she carries herself is a different issue. Reese has been the same person in every setting, a beautiful outgoing Black woman who believes in herself more than anyone else.
Acho said she had to ātake it on the chinā and ātake the L like sheās grown.ā
Did she act like a sore loser and not give Clark and the Iowa team their props? No! She wanted to be treated with respect by people who had nothing to do with the game on the court. Youāre allowed to root against a team or player without being extremely racist or sexist.
Iāll be honest, I was rooting for LSU on Monday, but that didnāt mean Iām immediately given the right to speak about Clark like sheās inhuman if they win. Reese is simply asking for that same kind of treatment.
Hopefully, she will receive that when sheās playing in the WNBA next season.
Following the criticism heās faced on social media, Acho has attempted to justify his words by saying that heās previously spoken out against racial & gender bias.
He wrote on X, āPlease know, I always speak out on racial & gender bias. One of the few on TV to speak on it. I have also consistently publicly supported Angel through it. However, I donāt blindly support anyone. I assess every situation individually and then speak.ā
He added, āAlso, just because you disagree with one individualās actions, one time, does not mean you hate them. The job is to be an analyst, not a fan. Which means your opinions must shift as actions shift.ā
Yeah, not good enough. This makes what you said about Reese even more preposterous. If youāve previously spoken out about racial and gender bias, then why ignore it now?
Your assessment of the situation with Reese was poor and instead of owning up to it, you simply said, āWell Iāve done it before.ā
Either way, Acho has long frustrated people on social media. Remember, this is the same guy who sat down with a panel of white police officers after the murder of George Floyd when he shouldāve spoken to the community that was directly affected by his death: Black people.
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