WNBA star A’ja Wilson was like many Americans last August when they heard the news of Olympic gymnast Jordan Chiles being stripped of her individual bronze medal – ‘p—-d’.
Chiles won her first gold medal as part of Team USA at the Paris Olympics and temporarily took home an individual bronze in the floor exercise.
She lost her individual medal after an appeal from Romania days after the event took place. Chiles has filed a counter-appeal to overturn the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s decision to strip her of the medal.
Meanwhile, Wilson was in France competing for Team USA in women’s basketball, winning a gold medal.
The two friends were named TIME’s ‘Women of the Year’ on Thursday, with Wilson torching the decision to deprive Chiles of her medal. Wilson was asked the lay-up question of whether the initial decision was the correct one.
‘Stop playing me. What kind of question is that? Yes. It’s a no-brainer. And I was p—-d. Honestly, I prayed for you,’ Wilson said.

+2
View gallery
A’ja Wilson spoke out about Jordan Chiles’ being stripped of her Olympic bronze medal

+2
View gallery
Chiles and Wilson were named TIME’s ‘Women of the Year’ early Thursday in a joint honor
‘Thank you,’ Chiles responded.
‘I know those moments are hard – and here I go, about to cry – you worked your ass off to get to that,’ Wilson added. ‘I really prayed, not only because you’re my friend, but because I see you, I understand you, and it may look different because we’re in different sports, but you’re fully equipped, and God’s gonna always have you no matter what. And that’s gonna be my clean version, because the other version…’
‘I already got the other version,’ Chiles concluded.
The UCLA gymnast may be referring to a more explicit response about her ordeal from her friend, stating how unfair her being stripped of a bronze medal.
In December, fellow basketball star Caitlin Clark, who was the first overall pick in last year’s WNBA Draft, was named ‘Athlete of the Year’ by TIME Magazine after her debut season with the Indiana fever saw her smash records and bring unprecedented attention to the women’s league.
Clark was not chosen to play for Team USA, in what some called a surprising snub. However, the Fever star was part of the WNBA All-Star team that took down Team USA before its Olympic journey in the only defeat Wilson’s squad took all summer.
Wilson and Clark figure to be locks for the 2028 Summer Olympics’ team when the games come to Los Angeles.
News
When I was seventeen, I came home from school and found the house hollow.
When I was seventeen, I came home from school and found the house hollow. Not quiet. Hollow. There is a difference. Quiet still carries life inside it—the hum of a refrigerator, the memory of voices, the promise that someone…
He Was Homeless As A Teen And Would Sleep On Subway Trains But Today He’s A Global Icon
Before he became a global superstar selling out stadiums and topping charts worldwide, Ed Sheeran was a struggling young musician chasing a dream with little more than a guitar and determination. Born Edward Christopher Sheeran on February 17, 1991, in…
The Orchard Remembers
Chapter One The House That Kept Score My name is Margaret Row, and I live in a house that remembers more than most people do. It is not grand. There are no columns, no veranda wrapped in white lace, no…
The Quilt She Took Back
Chapter One The Gift Table At my daughter’s baby shower, I handed her a quilt I had stitched by hand over nine months, and she laughed. It wasn’t a cruel laugh, not exactly. Cruelty rarely arrives in its own name….
The Kindness She Forgot
Chapter One The Corner By five in the afternoon, the west side of Dayton always looked a little tired. The light turned copper on the cracked sidewalks. Traffic from the main road thinned into a restless hum. A bus sighed…
My 12-year-old daughter saved up money to buy new sneakers for a boy in her class — the next day, the principal called me and shouted, “Come to school immediately! Something has happened, and she’s involved!”
My daughter secretly spent months saving to buy shoes for a boy in her class. The next day, the school called and told me Emma was involved in something that sounded serious. I rushed over, but when I opened the…
End of content
No more pages to load