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The comedian Shane Gillis was used to be the host of the Espys on Wednesday night, and had a Zinger star for the fever of Indiana Caitlin Clark during one of his initial monologues.
Gillis, who is also an actor of the Netflix series “Tires”, had something for everyone while on stage in Los Angeles. The star of Oklahoma City Thunder, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Cleveland Browns Marshal Browns, Shedeur Sanders, were also among the objectives.
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The comedian Shane Gillis reacts in the field before the game of the first playoffs round between the Indiana Hoosiers and the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at the Notre Dame Stadium on December 20, 2024 in South Bend, Indiana. (Justin Casterline/Getty Images)
But Gillis mapped Clark’s future after ending the WNBA.
“When Caitlin Clark retires from the WNBA, she will work in a Gofres house so she can continue doing what she loves most: black women fighting the fist,” he told the polite laughs of the crowd.
Clark was not in the Espys on Wednesday, since it continues to be evaluated after an apparent injury during the team’s victory over the Connecticut Sun. He left the floor on Tuesday night grabbing his upper leg and was seen at the Bank crying.
Caitlin Clark’s brother blames the referees for the last injuries in the fever star

Indiana’s fever guard, Caitlin Clark (22), speaks with an arbitrator against Atlanta’s dream in the first half in State Parc Arena. (Brett Davis/Imagn images)
The fever star was scheduled to be captain in the game of stars and participate in the 3 -point shooting contest. But all that seemed in the air.
“There is still no discussion about this weekend,” said Faver coach Stephanie White, Wednesday night. “Images were made and, obviously, we are discarding it tonight, but there has been no discussion beyond tonight.”
Clark suffered an injury to the groin at the end of the fourth quarter of Indiana’s victory over the Sun in Boston on Tuesday night. White said he didn’t believe it was a “reinocence.” Clark wasted time in May due to a quadruple lesion and was recently set aside for five games with a tension of the left groin.

Indiana’s fever guard, Caitlin Clark, smiles while looking at the team’s bank after making a pass to the basket that led to a score in the second half of a WNBA basketball match against the Dallas Wings on Sunday, September 1, 2024, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Tony GutiĆ©rrez)
“I am not really sure that it is a reset as much as a different type of injury. I often know when you are working with injuries in the groin and the quad and the hamstring and all those things, you only have that everyone is united, and it is not always one thing.”