Serena Williams thinks Caitlin Clark is handling the WNBA tumult well.

Williams spoke to reporters at the Tribeca Festival about her docuseries In the Arena: Serena Williams, which premiered earlier this week. During her session, the New York Post reports she was asked about Clark.

“I just love that she tries to stay grounded. She said that she doesn’t look at her social [media],” Williams said.

“I get it. I don’t look at it either. It’s so important to continue to do what she’s doing. No matter what other people do, if people are negative, it’s because they can’t do what you do, basically. Hopefully she’ll continue to do what she’s doing.”

Williams had gone through a similar crucible as a rising young tennis star.

“I was bullied,” Williams said. “Things that I had to go through, now people would be canceled for saying [what they did] back then.”

Williams also expressed interest in potentially owning a WNBA team.

“I absolutely would be (interested). With the right market, I would definitely be super interested in that,” Williams told CNN earlier this year.

“We just needed the right catalyst and the right people and I think that’s been happening over the past two years. I think women’s sport is having a moment that it should have always had
 Now it’s time to lift up others sports, women’s soccer, women’s basketball,” Williams said.

How many points did Caitlin Clark score last night? Rookie frustrated as Fever fall to Storm

Caitlin Clark had one of her more efficient nights as a pro, but it wasn’t enough for the No. 1 pick in the 2024 WNBA draft to get a win.

Clark and the Indiana Fever fell to the Seattle Storm 89-77 Thursday night, the third time Seattle has defeated Indiana this season. Clark finished with 15 points, six rebounds, seven assists and one block. Clark shot 4-of-9 from the field, including 3-of-7 from 3. She also went 4-of-5 from the free throw line.

Jewell Loyd led the Storm with 34 points on 10-of-15 shooting, including 6-of-9 from long distance. Nneka Ogwumike had a double-double with 15 points and 11 rebounds. She also blocked three shots and grabbed three steals.

It was a frustrating night for Clark, who also recorded six turnovers. It started with an injury scare, too.

Clark drove the lane in the first two minutes and was short on the layup as her left knee buckled. She landed awkwardly, and looked like she was in pain, grimacing and flexing her leg repeatedly. Indiana coach Christie Sides immediately sent Erica Wheeler to the scorer’s table to sub in for Clark, but Clark waved her away.

The Iowa graduate is known for her toughness. Clark didn’t miss a game in college, regularly playing through bumps, bruises and illness. She has talked frankly about wanting to play for the thousands who turn out to see her; it was another sellout at Climate Pledge Arena Thursday night, with attendees including Storm legend Sue Bird, USWNT star Megan Rapinoe (Bird’s fiancee) and Milwaukee Bucks guard Damian Lillard.

Clark has a history of playing well in Climate Pledge. As a college junior she scored 31 points in the Sweet 16 here, then dominated every facet of the game in her Elite Eight matchup vs. Louisville, scoring 41 points, grabbing 10 rebounds and dishing 12 assists in leading Iowa to the 2023 Final Four. She scored 21 earlier this season in Seattle, also grabbing seven rebounds and handing out seven assists.

Thursday’s matchup was the first of a three-game road swing for Indiana and Clark. They play at Phoenix on Sunday, then head to Las Vegas to take on the two-time defending champion Aces on July 2.