Reading view
Euro 2025 Daily: Germany need jump start to beat Denmark
Yankees vs. Mariners predictions, odds: MLB picks, best bets Tuesday
Mary Lou Retton DUI mug shots show her looking dazed and disheveled
Why Jared Goff felt ‘betrayed’ by Rams after blockbuster Lions trade
Anthony Elanga arrives on Tyneside as Newcastle close on signing
© PA Wire
Charlotte Flair recalls controversial WrestleMania 41 faceoff with Tiffany Stratton that 'rocked' her
Charlotte Flair earned a shot at Tiffany Stratton’s WWE Women’s Championship at WrestleMania 41 when she made her illustrious return to the Royal Rumble and won it.
The temperature between the two competitors was turned up a notch on the road to WrestleMania. One of the last faceoffs between Flair and Stratton got personal when the two brought up their real-life relationships into the center of the ring.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
As the back-and-forth began to fizzle out on the April 4 episode of "Friday Night SmackDown," Stratton went hard saying that after WrestleMania Flair was going to be just as "alone" inside of the ring as she was on the outside and suggested she was "0-3" in her love life — an apparent reference to the divorces she’d gone through. Not to mention that Flair was only months removed from her most recent divorce from fellow pro wrestler Andrade.
The moment was widely talked about and analyzed in the days leading up to their WrestleMania 41 match, which saw Stratton retaining the title. The two have appeared together scantly since then.
On Tuesday, Flair published a piece in The Players’ Tribune recalling the controversial moment. She suggested the slight left a mark on her.
"And I think in those times when people have seen me appear rattled by the booing, those are just the times when I’ve felt like — at least for a moment — the boos aren’t for Charlotte. They’re for Ashley," she wrote referencing her real name, Ashley Fliehr. "They’re for me. They’re because of the way I look. Or because of the energy I’m giving off as a woman. Or because of real trauma I’ve gone through in real life.
"So when it got mentioned in Chicago that I have an ‘0–3 record at marriages’ … yeah, it rocked me legit. I’m not too proud to tell you that. I don’t need everyone thinking I’m playing 5-D chess all of the time. My reaction to that line was as genuine as it gets. Because — and maybe this makes me naive — in my head?? Charlotte hasn’t been divorced. So I wasn’t expecting it to come up in that promo….. and then all of a sudden I had an entire arena cheering as I got mocked for something that was (and frankly still is) devastating to me."
Flair admitted that the personal stuff hits harder than any of the injuries or bumps and bruises that she’s attained over her WWE career.
Flair is a 14-time women’s champion on the WWE main roster. She’s also one of only a few who have won the NXT Women’s Championship multiple times.
She will have her sights set on tag-team gold on Sunday when she teams up with Alexa Bliss in a fatal four-way tag-team match to take the tag belts off of Roxanne Perez and Raquel Rodriguez at WWE Evolution 2.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
BetMGM bonus code POSTBET for $1,500 in bonus bets for Yankees vs. Mariners
Carlos Alcaraz enters peak brutality mode in swiping aside Cameron Norrie at Wimbledon
Defending champion Alcaraz cruised to the semi-finals against Norrie, ending British singles hopes for 2025
© Getty Images
Wimbledon’s last British hope Cameron Norrie swept aside by Carlos Alcaraz
© PA Wire
Inside Sarina Wiegman’s gameplan to save England from Women’s Euro 2025 embarrassment
Wiegman has been planning for the match against her native Netherlands for some time, in one of many connections between the teams, but the clash comes with the twist of the Lionesses facing the prospect of early elimination from the Euros
© Getty Images
Wimbledon diary: Sir Ian McKellen takes in the tennis and fans pack Henman Hill
© PA Wire
WNBA player lashed out at reporter for asking about Caitlin Clark eye-poking incident, new book reveals
DiJonai Carrington found herself in headlines last season when she accidentally poked Caitlin Clark in the eye,
When she was asked about it by USA Today's Christine Brennan, it turned into a war of words.
The Women's National Basketball Players' Association issued a scathing statement, calling out Brennan by name over an interview with Carrington that the union claimed fueled "racist, homophobic and misogynistic vitriol" online.
Brennnan asked Carrington, who was on the Connecticut Sun at the time, whether she intended to hit Clark in the eye after the video, and whether she and Marina Mabry, who recently shoved Clark to the ground in a game, made fun of the incident afterward. Carrington denied both were the truth.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
However, another one of Clark's rivals, DeWanna Bonner, confronted Brennan just minutes after her back and forth with Carrington, Brennan revealed in her new book "On Her Game: Caitlin Clark and the Revolution in Women's Sports."
Bonner, who was Carrington's teammate on the Sun at the time, approached Brennan saying that she had "attacked" and "disrespected" Carrington. She used both accusations twice each.
Brennan said she tried to introduce herself to Bonner, and even offered Bonner the chance to listen to their exchange – but Bonner apparently wanted no part.
Brennan then said she texted then-Sun head coach Stephanie White, now Clark's coach with the Indiana Fever, to let her know of the situation, which she called "journalism 101." She also said in the book that a WNBA official told her that her questions were "fine."
"Unfortunately, most of our players have zero idea what real media exposure is," the official admitted to Brennan, according to the author. "They don’t know what real coverage is, they have been shielded at college and then they come to the WNBA not knowing what real questions are. Frankly, our players just don’t get it."
Brennan said Carrington also took issue with reporters, including herself, the next day, claiming they were "talking s---" about NaLyssa Smith, her partner who just so happened to be on the Fever. Brennan claimed the two other reporters were simply discussing "a bit of a Fever strategy that had just noticed on the court."
Smith confronted Brennan, who told Smith she didn't say anything negative, but Smith said she was "lying," Brennan wrote in the book.
Bonner signed a one-year deal with the Fever during the offseason, but was waived after it was reported she had "no interest" in playing for them anymore.
Carrington and Smith appeared to joke about the eye-poking incident during an Instagram Live video in October.
Fox News' Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Sources: AD had surgery to fix detached retina
Yanks moving Chisholm back to 2B after 3B stint
Why Mbappé, PSG reunion at Club World Cup will be must-see TV
Kirk Cousins felt ‘misled’ when Falcons drafted Michael Penix Jr.
Aaron Boone’s plans for Yankees infield with Jazz Chisholm moving to second
Fluminense vs Chelsea live: Club World Cup semi-final to take place in searing New York heat
Enzo Maresca’s side face Brazilian opposition with a place in the Club World Cup final on the line in New Jersey
© Getty Images