Caitlin Clark was so giddy after a surprise meeting with her childhood idol Maya Moore

Caitlin Clark turned into a kid again when Maya Moore came out.

Caitlin Clark wouldn’t be the excellent basketball player she is today without the players who paved the way before her, and one of those players in particular was Maya Moore. The UConn and Minnesota Lynx legend was one of Clark’s biggest influences, and on Sunday, Clark got to meet her idol for the first time… well, kind of the first time.

During an interview with Clark before Iowa’s game against No. 2 Ohio State, ESPN had Moore pop out to surprise the NCAA’s new career scoring record holder. Clark let out an audible gasp. “I’m fan-girling so hard,” she said, before explaining how she met Moore as a kid and was able to hug her and get an autograph.

This was a cool moment for both women, and a full-circle moment for Moore, who remembered when she got to meet some of the legends who influenced her. Clark will no doubt do the same for future players.

Q&A: Atlanta Dream guard Haley Jones tried to build a WNBA Mt. Rushmore and it was so hard

“I’m stressed out over here! I’m getting a new pimple!”

Haley Jones is just a California girl with Atlanta dreams. Yet, her vision for her career extends beyond the court and into girls’ lives everywhere.

During her college career at Stanford, Jones was an AP All-American and Pac-12 Co-Player of the Year and also won a national championship. In 2023, she was drafted by the Atlanta Dream, where she thrived and walked away with WNBA All-Rookie Team honors. Now, she’s hoping to build upon her success and share her passion for basketball with other young players.

In celebration of National Girls and Women in Sports Day, the WNBA and VOICEINSPORT (VIS) are partnering with the WNBA Changemaker Collective to engage and unlock services to over 50,000 girls via VIS’s platform. Jones and 11 other WNBA players have signed on to become VIS mentors, something she says she wished she had as a young athlete.

“It would have meant a lot because the W was very young when I was growing up, and social media wasn’t as big back then,” she told For The Win in a recent interview. “So, I didn’t have those role models, and I feel like nowadays, kids can connect to us through Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, whatever it may be. It would have meant the world to have that one-on-one connection or feel like you really know your favorite athletes and people who look like you.”

Ahead of the 2024 WNBA season, Jones spoke with For the Win about what she would have changed from her first season in the league, why having new teammate Jordin Canada guard her was annoying, and why it stresses her out to pick just four players to be on her WNBA Mount Rushmore of greats.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Hannah Hidalgo is USA Basketball Female Athlete of the Year

Congrats, Hannah!

[autotag]Hannah Hidalgo[/autotag] only has played college basketball for a month, but the Notre Dame freshman phenom already is making an impact. She’s the nation’s leader in steals (6.0 a game) and one of its top scorers (23.6 points a game). But that doesn’t begin to describe what she’s done overall this year.

Hidalgo has won the prestigious USA Basketball Female Athlete of the Year award for how well she did in international play this season. During the FIBA U19 Women’s Basketball World Cup, she averaged 10.7 points and 5.4 assists a game to help the U.S. win the gold medal. Joni Taylor, her coach from that tournament, said it best:

“Hannah Hidalgo is a name you will not forget.”

In winning this award, Hidalgo is joining elite company in more ways than one. She is only the fourth player to win it before beginning her collegiate career, joining Paige Bueckers, Brianna Stewart and Janelle Bailey.

Many women’s basketball legends, some of which remain active and others are enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame, have won this award since it was first given out in 1980. These include Diana Taurasi, Teresa Edwards, Lisa Leslie, Dawn Staley, Cheryl Miller, Katrina McClain, A’ja Wilson, Maya Moore, Tina Charles, Katie Smith, Natalie Williams, Ruthie Bolton, Chamique Holdsclaw, Seimone Augustus and Lynette Woodard.

If that list is any indication, Hidalgo is on her way to becoming not only an Irish legend but a legend of the sport. It probably wouldn’t surprise her either because she indicated such when Fighting Irish Wire asked her about it after the Irish’s win over Lafayette:

“No, I’m not surprised at all. I think I know what God has blessed me with, and so, it’s a lot easier when I have teammates like the ones that I do. That makes the game just so much easier.”

Here’s to the latest of what should be many more honors for someone who’s just getting started.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Maya Moore reveals she married the man she helped free from jail

Maya Moore walked away from the NBA to help overturn a man’s wrongful conviction. Now they’re married.

Former WNBA MVP Maya Moore is one of the most underrecognized activists in sports, and as our own Hemal Jhaveri wrote earlier this year, her incredible sacrifice is a reminder of what real activism looks like.

In the prime of her career, the four-time WNBA champion walked away from the game to focus on helping to free Jonathan Irons, who was wrongfully convicted in 1998 on burglary and assault charges and spent 22 years in jail.

In July, Moore and the team of people who fought for Irons’ freedom were able to celebrate, as he was finally released from Jefferson City Correctional Center in Missouri.

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CCHjLUcKfcF/?utm_source=ig_embed

Moore’s connection with Irons has a storybook twist. During an appearance on Good Morning America, Moore and Irons revealed that they are now married.

Congratulations to the happy couple.

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Maya Moore’s sacrifice set a new bar for athlete activism

Moore selflessly put personal ambition on hold, but

At the height of her professional peak, WNBA star Maya Moore put her career with the Minnesota Lynx on hold to help one man gain his freedom.

On Wednesday, Jonathan Irons walked out of Missouri’s Jefferson City Correctional Center a free man, after Moore and a dedicated team worked tirelessly to overturn his wrongful 1998 conviction on charges of burglary and assault with a weapon.

In a video posted on Instagram, Moore drops to her knees in relief as Irons walks out of the front doors, and waits her turn before being able to embrace him. It’s a much deserved celebratory moment, but also a stark reminder of the gross failures of our judicial system.

 

What Moore and the rest of Irons’ team has accomplished is nothing short of remarkable yet it is infuriating that this is what it took to get an innocent man out of jail.

According to ESPN, Irons was arrested at 16 and tried as an adult by an all white jury.  He served 22 years of a 50 year sentence that rested on eyewitness testimony even though there was no physical evidence to link him to the crime.

Moore took an interest in the case as a teenager, seeing a cousin pour over Irons’ files. She established a relationship with Irons through her family, and finally around 2018, suffering from burn out and motivated more and more by Irons’ story, Moore put her career on hold to see a gross injustice set to right.

For two years, Moore has advocated for Irons and contributed to his legal fees, helping the team fighting for his release. The case, she told the New York Times, gave her a new sense of purpose and direction. Moore, who won the WNBA Rookie of the Year Award and a Finals MVP and League MVP honor, put aside her ambition because she felt compelled to do something greater. She showed that a commitment towards social justice requires more than a few Instagram posts and 250 characters on Twitter.

In the past month, athlete activism has been in something of a resurgence, with players stepping up to lead in ways that they haven’t before. Many are dipping their toes in the water, trying to hold their careers and their morals in both hands. I don’t doubt that these athletes have their hearts in the right place and are willing to do the work of achieving real justice, but they should look to Moore to see what a long road lies ahead of them.  Achieving racial justice won’t be accomplished in the span of a season or two, nor will it come without real tests of perseverance and strength.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, roughly 2.2 million people are behind bars in the United States, an increase of 1.9 million since 1972. The United States has the world’s largest prison population and over incarcerates young black men at staggering rate. Per SPLC, “young black men who failed to finish high school are more likely to be behind bars than employed.”

Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve effectively summarized why Moore’s victory was double-edged.

“Maya Moore should never have had to leave her profession to engage in the fight against the two-tiered criminal justice system that over polices, wrongfully convicts, and over sentences black and brown communities,” she said in a statement. “The criminal justice system in America is so far from fair and equal and it angers me that Maya has had to sacrifice so much to overcome this racially disparate system.”

Moore now joins the ranks of Colin Kaepernick and Muhammad Ali in setting the standard for athlete activism.  It’s clear that what Moore helped accomplish off the court will be as great a part of her legacy as what she achieved on it.

Former Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe …

Former Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant said he believes that there are three WNBA players who could play in the NBA right now. “I think there are a couple of players who could play in the NBA right now, honestly,” Bryant told CNN when asked whether there might be a day when his daughter could play in the same league in which he was a five-time champion and 18-time All-Star selection during his 20 seasons with the Lakers. “There’s a lot of players with a lot of skill that could do it. “Diana Taurasi, Maya Moore, Elena Delle Donne. There’s a lot of great players out there, so they could certainly keep up with them.”

We’re not talking about Maya Moore enough

This is one of the most noble things we’ve ever seen.

Maya Moore is easily one of the greatest athletes of our time. In eight years of WNBA basketball, Moore has won four championships, one MVP trophy, another Finals MVP trophy and been named an All-Star six times. She transformed the Minnesota Lynx into a yearly contender.

That’s GOAT level stuff. It all pales in comparison to what she’s doing off of the court.

Moore will skip her second WNBA season in a row this summer to focus on criminal justice reform, the New York Times reports. Specifically, on the case of Jonathan Irons — a man who she believes was wrongfully convicted at age 16. He’s 39 year old now.

Irons is in the middle of service a 50-year prison sentence after being convicted of burglary and assaulting a homeowner with a gun in St. Louis. The homeowner was shot during the assault and testified that Irons was the perpetrator, but there was no evidence linking Irons to the crime.

Moore has been talking about this case since she met Irons in 2017. She took a year off from the game last year to minister in Atlanta and is doing the same this year.

This is unprecedented. We’re not talking about this enough. This is Michael Jordan going into his first retirement, except for instead of sucking at baseball, Moore is being a boss in criminal justice.

She’s 30 years old. We have no idea how much basketball she actually has left in her where she’s playing at a high level. We also have no idea when she’s returning. But this is very clearly bigger than just basketball to her.

This is an opportunity for her to pull someone up and out of a trap that so many people fall into because of no fault of their own. They have no lifelines and no help. Moore is trying to be that for someone who truly needs it.

Over the last few years, athletes have found themselves pursuing the passions they have outside of their sport more and more. A lot have done some real good with that newfound power. Add Moore to that ever-growing list.

Moore isn’t retiring from the game just yet, but this is probably the closest thing to it. We might not ever see her play again. And if she comes back, there’s no guarantee she’ll be as good.

It’s a massive sacrifice that she is choosing to make, but it’s also one that could make a massive difference in somebody’s world — bigger than any difference she could ever make on a basketball court.

If she never players a single minute of WNBA basketball again, it’ll all be worth it.

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