Jason Whitlock turns on ‘woke’ Caitlin Clark in wild meltdown at TIME article: ‘Conquered by angry lesbians’

Jason Whitlock has dropped his support for Caitlin Clark in a hysterical meltdown following her interview with TIME magazine earlier this week.

Clark, 22, was named Athlete of the Year for 2024 after her breakout WNBA season with the Indiana Fever sparked interest in women’s basketball.

In her interview with the publication, Clark spoke about the “white privilege” that came her way when she joined the league and ramped up interest – comments that left Whitlock, who has been a strong supporter of Clark until now, in tears.

“She simply said in this TIME interview, ‘Hey Whitlock, I don’t like you. And all you evangelical conservatives who came with me.’ I’m from the woke basketball club. I’m with the feminists, I’m with the lesbians,” Whitlock said.

“Holy cow. I cried this morning when I read the article in TIME magazine. It’s even worse than just the fragments. It’s systematic, the destruction of her. She has been conquered and I knew this was a possibility – I half predicted this.

“She has been sent to the front lines of the culture war. This LBQBTQ heterosexual war, the whole gender war going on, the WNBA is a feminist, has woken up the stronghold. Perhaps the strongest of all strongholds that the satanic left holds.

Jason Whitlock attacked Caitlin Clark for her comments in her TIME interview

The controversial analyst was a great admirer of Clark before he now turned against her

The controversial analyst was a great admirer of Clark before he now turned against her

Whitlock said he

Whitlock said he “cried” over Clark’s comments about white privilege in her recent interview

“We’re taking this little girl from a small town in Iowa and dropping her behind enemy lines: the WNBA. The group of angry lesbians who organize a basketball gay pride tour that visits twelve different major cities. And it’s just a little sex tour during the summer.

“And Caitlin Clark gets involved and she has a boyfriend and she does her best to stay out of politics. And we’ve seen other heterosexual women get dropped into the WNBA, behind enemy lines, and they come running and screaming like ‘holy cow, are they hostile to heterosexual women in the WNBA.’

Whitlock went on to say that Clark faced more challenges as a heterosexual white woman in the WNBA than Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play in Major League Baseball.

“At the very beginning, I wrote that what awaited Clark was more difficult than what Jackie Robinson had going into the MLB in 1947. And people thought I was crazy,” Whitlock said.

“Robinson faced legitimate death threats, but in every other way what awaited Caitlin Clark when he went to the WNBA would have been significantly more difficult.

‘And look where we are eight months later. Caitlin Clark waved the white flag and surrendered.”

Whitlock also received help from a colleague during his show in tearing down a poster of Clark from the wall in his studio.

He replaced it with a photo of Clark’s WNBA rival Sophie Cunningham and in a comment on Cunningham’s performance, Whitlock said, “I will say this, when Sophie wakes up, she still stays awake.” I’ll say that.’

Clark has generated a lot of interest in WNBA games after being drafted by the Indiana Fever

Clark has generated a lot of interest in WNBA games after being drafted by the Indiana Fever

Whitlock shared the clip on X of the upcoming Clark poster, writing, “@Urboy_Butter unfortunately had to help me take down my Caitlin Clark poster today. Her article in TIME Magazine forced me to do so.’

About black women in the WNBA, Clark told TIME, “I want to say I’ve earned everything, but as a white person I have privilege.

“A lot of the players in the league who have been really good have been black players. This league is kind of built on them.

“The more we can uplift Black women, that will be a beautiful thing.”