INDIANAPOLIS — Jack Hughes didn’t just score; he shattered a 46-year curse. The puck slid past Jordan Binnington 1:41 into overtime, securing a stunning 2-1 victory for Team USA men’s hockey over Canada at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. The arena erupted. Back in the States, Indiana Fever superstar Caitlin Clark watched every second. But Clark didn’t just spend her weekend celebrating the golden goal. She shifted gears instantly, taking a hilarious shot at her own team’s social media department over a horribly edited highlight reel of teammate Aliyah Boston.
From National Pride to Aspect Ratio Nightmares
Clark spreads the love across all sports. When Megan Keller buried a 3-on-3 overtime winner to give the USA women a 2-1 gold medal victory over Canada just days prior, Clark threw on a USA Hockey jersey to back the squad. She saluted the Indiana Hoosiers in January after their historic 16-0 run and 27-21 College Football Playoff National Championship win over Miami. She even tipped her cap to former Iowa Hawkeye Cooper DeJean when his team snatched Super Bowl LIX away from her beloved Kansas City Chiefs.
Sunday was no different. She jumped on Instagram to repost Nike’s graphic honoring the USA men’s triumph, standing in solidarity with athletes across the NBA and NFL who marveled at the grit required to survive the hard-hitting Canadians.
Then, she checked her own team’s feed.
The Fever’s social media staff tried to hype up Boston’s incredible rim protection from the offseason, highlighting her league-leading 24 blocks in the Unrivaled league. They uploaded a compilation video to X and Instagram. The problem? Whoever rendered the video forgot to adjust the aspect ratio. The severe horizontal compression squished the footage, turning a hype video into a funhouse mirror effect. You could practically hear Clark squinting at her phone screen before she hit the comments.
“Respectfully, how am I supposed to watch this… Now I have a migraine.”
— Caitlin Clark, Indiana Fever Guard
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Boston laughed off the editing disaster in the replies, but fans immediately begged the admin to take the clip down and format it correctly. The Fever will need clear vision heading into the spring. The 2026 WNBA season tips off on May 9, and Clark returns to the court looking to build on a 2025 campaign cut short by injuries to just 13 games. Despite Clark missing significant time last year, Boston and Kelsey Mitchell carried Indiana to the playoff semifinals.
Now, the core reunites. Once the social media admin figures out how to export a video in 16:9, the entire franchise can lock in for their highly anticipated season opener against Paige Bueckers and the Dallas Wings.

