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Aug 31, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Indiana Fever head coach Stephanie White talks to media members before the game against the Golden State Valkyries at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Stephanie White addresses officiating discussions ahead of WNBA season

Indiana Fever head coach Stephanie White addressed the WNBA’s officiating situation directly in a measured but pointed tone at training camp this week, and as per Fever beat reporter Chloe Peterson, White acknowledged the committees the league formed during the offseason.

However, White drew a clear line between process and outcome.

“Talking about it and making changes are different things,” Stephanie White said. Her emphasis was on consistency, and her hope was conditional. “My hope is (that) all the work in the offseason, we’re going to see some results.”

Her comments arrive at a moment when the league has at least acknowledged the problem publicly, as WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert confirmed the formation of a specialized officiating task force over the offseason, directly addressing concerns regarding physicality.

“It’s going to be a physical game, but you know, we’ve got to draw lines, and I think you’ll see some more lines being drawn around that physicality as a result of some of the insights,” Engelbert said, per CBS Sports.

But as Stephanie White’s remarks indicate, the league’s acknowledgment has not yet translated into confidence among its coaches.

That being said, this is not a new conversation for White.

In May 2025, following a narrow loss to the New York Liberty that featured a 31-point free-throw discrepancy against Indiana, she said, “The disrespect right now for our team has been pretty unbelievable.”

Those comments, however, resulted in a fine from the league.

Stephanie White was fined again later in the season after she publicly questioned officiating consistency for a second time.

When asked about officiating after the fine, she responded with a smirk: “Do you want me to get fined again? Because I did just get fined.”

The broader context involves the league’s rapid growth running up against infrastructure that has not kept pace.

White has specifically pointed to referee pipelines and training resources as the structural issue, and not just in-game calls, saying, “Every part of our league has gotten better, and that part has lagged behind. Oftentimes, it’s infrastructure in terms of training, and oftentimes it’s financial.”

Having said that, Stephanie White’s attention, apart from the officiating conversation, is also being directed towards preparing a Fever roster that spent most of last season operating without its best player.

Stephanie White and Caitlin Clark Focused on Durability in Year Three

To the uninformed, Caitlin Clark appeared in just 13 games last season after suffering a groin injury and a bone bruise, and her return to full health has become the team’s central storyline heading into the season.

Clark, for her part, addressed her preparation directly at camp.

“Taking care of my body at this point in the season is probably the most important thing,” she said, highlighting daily recovery work and pre-court treatment as priorities.

Furthermore, those around the team have noted a visible physical change in her build, the result of an offseason focused on adding strength to withstand the contact she has faced since her rookie year.

Stephanie White has also echoed the approach, noting the team intends to be “mindful” about the load on all of the Fever’s stars coming off a season disrupted by injury across the roster.

The Fever open their 2026 campaign on May 9 against Paige Bueckers and the Dallas Wings at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

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Written by

Shahul Hameed

Edited by

Arvind Rao