Angel Reese & Caitlin Clark animated in wrestling ring
Controversy swirled after Sunday’s national championship game when Angel Reese stalked Iowa star Caitlin Clark and her now-infamous gesture where she hit her with the John Cena’s “You can’t see me.”

In her interview with ESPN after beating Iowa, Reese explained that she felt Clark “disrespected” her teammate Alexa Morris, plus previous opponents, and her gesture was done out of revenge.

Judging by the video below, it seems the person crontoling them is a Reese fan as she dominated Clark. She hit her with the “You can’t see me” gesture, punch her in the stomach, do the People’s elbow, and also jump from the ring and onto a ladder where clark was lying.

For her part, Clark did not take any issue with getting taunted by Reese, considering that she had also trash-talked opponents in the NCAA Tournament.

Now, somebody is making the issues they had on the court and put them in a wrestling ring. Some genius created both the LSU Tigers star and Iowa Hawkeyes star and had them battle it out in WWE 2K23.

Judging by the video below, it seems the person crontoling them is a Reese fan as she dominated Clark. She hit her with the “You can’t see me” gesture, punch her in the stomach, do the People’s elbow, and also jump from the ring and onto a ladder where clark was lying.
Reese has also been thrust into the national spotlight for taking issues with First Lady Jill Biden initially saying that both LSU and Iowa should both get to visit the White House.

The White House has since walked back those comments, but Reese and her teammates have made it known that they do not want to come to the White House now.

In a comment on an Instagram post from ‘The Shade Room’ which included Reese’s tweet, the recently crowned NCAA champion said: “WE NOT COMING. period.”

Hawkeyes junior guard Clark weighed in on the matter, saying that she believed LSU should celebrate their moment in the sun alone.

Clark and Reese both had outstanding individual seasons and it’s clear that their skillset and personalities have helped popularize women’s college basketball to a whole different level.