In fact, the New York and Indiana players refused to take questions about basketball from media members in their respective locker rooms, expressing a willingness to discuss anything else. With her teammates assembled behind her, Liberty forward Swin Cash made a statement about the game, an 82-70 Fever win, and then Tanisha Wright stepped forward.

“We really feel like there’s still an issue here in America,” Wright said. “And we want to be able to use our platforms, we want to be able to use our voices, we don’t want to let anybody silence us in what we want to talk about. So you guys can ask away about anything that’s happening in society.

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“It’s unfortunate that the WNBA has fined us and not supported its players.”

Meanwhile, Fever forward Tamika Catchings was affirming that her team “would not be answering any basketball questions.” Catchings, one of the league’s all-time greats, said that the media blackout was a “group effort” and not the idea of any one particular player.

“I think, no matter what our success is on the court, basketball is just that, it’s just basketball, and there’s a whole other world outside of that, and it’s way more important than what we do,” Catchings said. She also referenced calls by Carmelo Anthony and other NBA players for their fellow athletes to speak out.

Fever forward Devereaux Peters said in an Instagram post Thursday, “We won’t be silenced.” She added, “People must understand that Black Lives Matter has nothing to do with being more important than any other race, and ABSOLUTELY DOES NOT SUPPORT KILLING COPS.”

Liberty forward Tina Charles was given the WNBA’s player of the month award Thursday, and she accepted it with her official warmup shirt inside-out, thus resembling a black shirt. “After seeing the African-American male shot three times after helping an autistic person out this morning in Florida, I knew I couldn’t be silent,” Charles said after Thursday’s game (via ESPN). “Knowing the player I am representing this organization, if anybody was going to wear it, it had to be me. I have no problem wearing this shirt inside out for the rest of the season until we are able to have the WNBA support us.”

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“My teammates and I will continue to use our platform and raise awareness for the #BlackLivesMatter movement until the @wnba gives its support as it does for Breast Cancer Awareness, Pride and other subject matters,” Charles explained in an Instagram post.

A perceived discrepancy between the WNBA’s response to the mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, when the league applauded its players’ response — even distributing commemorative shirts — and its reaction to the black shirts was noted by some other players on social media.