Angel Reese Exposed: Double-Doubles, Defensive Disasters, and a Social Media Meltdown

The box score says Angel Reese had 22 points and 13 rebounds. Sounds solid, right? Maybe even impressive?
WRONG.
Because what actually happened when Angel Reese and the Chicago Sky stepped onto the court against the Washington Mystics wasn’t just a loss. It was a destruction, a masterclass in humiliation, and a crystal-clear warning about why individual stats mean nothing without team success.
Let’s talk about the 103–86 beatdown.
Let’s talk about how two Mystics rookies outshined the supposed future face of the league.
Let’s talk about how Angel Reese got “too small”-taunted on live TV—and deserved it.
And finally, let’s talk about how Candace Parker called it all before it happened.
The Stats Lie — The Scoreboard Doesn’t
Let’s get the numbers out of the way. Angel Reese played 28 minutes, scored 22 points, grabbed 13 rebounds, and shot 10-of-11 from the free throw line.
But she also shot 6-of-16, picked up five fouls, and watched her team get outscored by 17 while she was on the floor.
The Mystics carved up Chicago’s defense like a Thanksgiving turkey—dropping 52 points in the paint. And who was supposed to be the defensive anchor protecting that paint?
You guessed it: Reese.
Sonia Citron & Kiki Iriafen: Rookie Royalty

While Reese was padding her stat line, Sonia Citron and Kiki Iriafen were rewriting history.
Citron dropped 28 points. Iriafen added 22 points, 10 rebounds, and 4 assists.
They became the first rookie duo in Mystics franchise history to each score 20+ points in the same game.
They didn’t just outplay the Sky—they embarrassed them. They didn’t just win—they sent a message.
And they did it while Angel Reese was too busy searching for fouls after bouncing layups off the bottom of the backboard.
Too Small, Too Slow, Too Soft
You want the most humiliating moment?
Shakira Austin drove right at Reese, hit the bucket, and hit her with the “too small” taunt on national television.
Even the announcers started laughing. Literally.
It was such an embarrassing moment, they had to collect themselves mid-broadcast. And Reese? She did nothing. No retaliation. No response. Just another walk back on defense, another defensive lapse, another blow-by bucket.
This is supposed to be the player anchoring your interior defense?
Yikes.
The Empty Calorie Queen

The Chicago Sky now sit at 7–19. They’ve lost six straight games. They’re near the bottom of the standings and firmly out of playoff contention.
But hey, at least Angel Reese has 11 straight double-doubles, right?
Wrong.
This is what we call empty calorie stats. Numbers that look nice, but don’t contribute to winning. While Reese’s personal brand soars, her team sinks. While she goes viral, the Sky go home losers.
Coach Tyler Marsh even took a direct shot postgame, calling out the team’s inability to protect the paint. That’s not a subtle critique. That’s squarely on Reese’s plate.
Candace Parker Drops the Truth Bomb
And if all that wasn’t enough, enter Candace Parker—three-time WNBA champion, two-time MVP, and respected veteran.
On her new podcast Post Moves with A’ja Wilson and Aaliyah Boston, Parker didn’t hold back. She ranked Angel Reese as a C-tier player.
Let that sink in.
C-tier. Not B. Not A. C.
She praised Reese’s rebounding but made it clear: Reese isn’t a No. 1 or No. 2 option. She’s not carrying a team. She’s not building a winner.
And Parker backed it up with logic, saying:
“What player are you taking Angel Reese over right now? She’s great at her role. But you have to carry a team to be in that top tier.”
Reese’s Response? Twitter Fingers.
So what did Angel Reese do with this feedback from a respected legend?
Did she hit the gym? Lock in? Vow to prove her wrong?
Nope.
She fired off a cryptic tweet:
“Clout is one hell of a drug.”
Really? Candace Parker is chasing clout?
This is a woman with MVPs, rings, and more basketball knowledge in her pinky than most players have in their whole careers. The only drug in play here is delusion—and Angel Reese might be overdosing on it.
Reese reposted fan tweets calling Parker “jealous,” and continued the drama instead of addressing the facts: she’s not winning, and it’s not because of clout. It’s because of basketball.
Meanwhile in Indiana… a Real Team Grows
While Angel Reese is creating beefs and excuses, Caitlin Clark and Aaliyah Boston are building a contender.
The Indiana Fever are above .500. They’re sitting in playoff position. And they’re doing it with team-first basketball.
Clark has transformed the Fever from a joke into a rising force. Boston has become a cornerstone. And players like Lexi Hull, Kelsey Mitchell, and Sophie Cunningham are stepping up in meaningful ways.
They don’t need to subtweet. They just win.
Clark doesn’t move the needle.
She is the needle.
The League is Watching — And Choosing
The WNBA is evolving. Teams are no longer fooled by flashy social media numbers and highlight-reel rebounds that lead to 17-point blowouts.
They want:
Real leaders.
Real defense.
Real impact.
And guess what? It’s showing. While Angel Reese gets “too small” taunted and clowned by rookie duos, the Fever are stacking wins with poise, toughness, and accountability.
2025 Belongs to Basketball – Not Brand Drama
If you’re a real WNBA fan, you already know what’s happening.
Angel Reese is not building a contender. She’s building controversy.
Meanwhile, players like Caitlin Clark, Aaliyah Boston, and Kiki Iriafen are building teams that win. They’re crafting legacies not through Twitter, but through basketball.
So when Candace Parker calls Reese C-tier, it’s not shade. It’s truth.
When your team is 7–19, the Mystics make history on your head, and you’re still subtweeting legends—it’s not clout, Angel.
It’s karma.
If you agree Angel Reese is making her team worse, COMMENT “MeBounds” right now.
Like. Subscribe. And turn on all notifications, so you don’t miss the next episode of reality slapping box scores in the face.
The Sky are falling. The drama’s rising. And only real hoopers will be left standing.
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