Skip to content

WNBA's Fever kneel together as team in anthem protest

USATODAY / Twitter

The new WNBA playoff format began with a protest and ended with Phoenix and Atlanta advancing.

It also produced the final game of Tamika Catchings' illustrious career when the Fever lost to the eighth-seeded Mercury 89-78 on Wednesday night.

Even though she lost, Catchings was proud of her teammates and the stand they took before the game when the entire squad knelt during the national anthem, locking arms and lowering heads in a show of unity. Players in several sports are protesting social injustice, racial oppression and police brutality in the United States.

''This game of basketball is important for a lot of reasons,'' Catchings said. ''One of them is bringing people together. Even uniting people. Well, we thought it was important to have a voice about something greater than basketball. But the good thing is, we were together. (The gesture) was something that was very impromptu, but I am very proud of our team - as people - to be able to stand together for something we believed in.''

Two members of the Mercury joined the Fever's protest, as Mistie Bass and Kelsey Bone also took a knee. There wasn't much reaction from the crowd.

The national anthem kneel-down started in San Francisco with 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and has spread to other teams and leagues. This was the first time an entire professional team took a knee.

WNBA President Lisa Borders backed the players' pregame demonstration.

''I support our players expressing their views on important social issues,'' she said in a statement provided to The Associated Press. ''Standing for an anthem is a sign of respect and a demonstration of unity across many cultures throughout the world. The call to action is for all of us to invest time and resources to help rebuild and strengthen our communities. And we have been actively working with the players on this next impactful effort.''

This wasn't the first time that Indiana had been involved in a protest this year. The Fever were one of a few WNBA teams to wear shirts in pregame warmups during July in support of the Black Lives Matters movement. Indiana was initially fined by the league, along with New York and Phoenix, before that penalty was later rescinded.

''Something like this creates conversation, and that's how we create change,'' Fever coach Stephanie White said. ''We don't create change by seeing it on the news and waiting until next time. People who have the platforms have the ability to affect change, and I'm proud of our group for using the platform in a respectful manner.''

Daily Newsletter

Get the latest trending sports news daily in your inbox