The conversation regarding Caitlin Clark and whether her peers are jealous is ongoing.
As the NCAA's all-time leading scorer has drawn historic viewership and attendance, the rookie phenom has been the victim of some hard fouls and injuries, including a ruptured eardrum.
On top of that, there have been several slights, both out loud and on social media, directed towards her since her WNBA debut.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON foxnews.1eye.us
Those discussions include whether race plays a role in her popularity, and other players celebrating her struggles. (In fairness, that comes with those players celebrating their own successes.)
So, WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert was asked by "The TODAY Show" whether she felt Clark was being targeted by other players.
She seemed to push back on that claim, saying it only seems that way because there is a "spotlight" on Clark.
WNBA COACH WEIGHS IN ON CAITLIN CLARK'S TRASH-TALKING ABILITIES
"The fans we’ve had for a long time know how we have the best, biggest, most physical, best players in the world," Engelbert said. "What people don’t realize [is] in college, there’s over 200 NCAA Division I women’s college programs. There’s 12 WNBA teams; so you take the talent, and it’s centralized with the best, the biggest, most physical, and, really, the best players in the world. So, I think there’s always an adjustment for all rookies. I think our rookie class this year is doing outstanding, including Caitlin. She was the rookie of the month for May."
"There is a spotlight," she added. No league is ever about one player. You see players, there's injuries, other things that happen. We're marketing around all of our players, but I think Caitlin's lifting everybody."
Clark earned the second-most votes in the first round of All-Star Game voting, behind only A'ja Wilson.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
She is averaging 16.2 points, 6.6 assists and 5.5 rebounds per game, while her last two games against Angel Reese and the Chicago Sky were the top-two most-watched WNBA games in over two decades.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.