2026-07-06 19:34:35 Natasha Cloud’s emotional reaction to Texas school shooting – NEW WTOP Skip to main content

Natasha Cloud’s emotional reaction to Texas school shooting

Cloud's emotional reaction to Texas school shooting originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

The Washington Mystics organization held another media blackout following the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas to discuss gun violence and to stress their pleas for government action.

As she normally does, guard Natasha Cloud was the voice of the team, speaking on behalf of her teammates after Washington’s 70-50 win over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night in Washington. 

“Today we’re going to do a media blackout,” Cloud said following the contest. “I think that you are all aware of what is happening, what happened in Texas, what happened in Buffalo not even a week and a half ago. We have an issue in this country, not only white supremacy, we also have a gun violence issue. And this is us using our platform.”

An 18-year-old gunman opened fire on Tuesday, killing 19 children in their last week of school before the summer break. Two adults were also killed, with many more injured. It was the deadliest school shooting since a gunman killed 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn., 10 years ago.

On May 15, there was a separate shooting in Buffalo, NY where 10 Black people were killed at a supermarket. City and federal officials called the shooting a racially motivated hate crime.

“This game doesn’t matter,” Cloud continued. “The [21] lives that were lost today from senseless gun violence in Texas, at an elementary school – we’re talking about our kids not being safe to go to school and our government is still not implementing sensible gun laws. This isn’t about taking people’s rights away from bearing arms. This is about putting sensible gun laws in so this doesn’t happen again.”

Cloud was direct in her comments asking society not to continue to make the same mistakes that allow these horrific incidents to happen. She claims nothing is being done at the legislative level because of money and for profit. She asked those who are tired of these shootings happening to write to local and federal representatives.

This is not the first time the Mystics have held a media blackout. For the fourth straight season, the team has dedicated at least one media availability to discussing societal issues in the United States.

During the team’s championship season in 2019, a stray bullet broke a window at Hendley Elementary in Southeast D.C. – less than two miles from the team’s arena and practice facility. No students or teachers were hurt in the shooting, but in the subsequent game the players refused to answer basketball questions.

While holding the blackout, speaking for the team, Cloud asked the D.C. government to adequately respond and create a solution. Cloud’s own blackout extended beyond just the one game and further into the season. 

Another media blackout took place following the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha, Wis. in 2020. The team took an even more drastic step by boycotting the game held on the evening of the shooting and wore white t-shirts that spelled out his name with seven bullet holes painted on them. Other teams inside the WNBA’s COVID-19 bubble in Bradenton, Fla. felt similarly and led the WNBA to postpone all contests for two days. 

Cloud sat out that 2020 season to focus on her own activism and not be distracted by basketball. Mystics teammate Ariel Atkins stepped forward to be the voice of the team during that time. 

Over the course of her seven-year career, Cloud has become a leading face in the WNBA for her activism and does not shy away from speaking on social issues. She has addressed racial discrimination, police violence, police reform, abortion issues, advocacy for women along with gun violence. 

“To the families in Texas, the Mystics are sending our love, our prayers. We pray for y’all today, we will continue to pray for you and we will continue to fight for you and we will fight for everyone in this country,”  Cloud said. 

Why the Mystics are in the WNBA draft lottery after making the playoffs

Mystics in WNBA lottery despite making playoffs in 2022 originally appeared on NBC Sports WashingtonTrading back from the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 WNBA Draft is about to reap a huge benefit for the Washington Mystics for the upcoming draft and beyond. The organization is entering the 2023 Draft Lottery with the rights to the pick that has the third-best odds for the No. 1 overall selection. That's despite the team making the postseason and finishing the year with the fifth-best record.It's all because of the haul Washington received for the top selection last year from the Atlanta Dream. The Mystics moved back to No. 3 in the 2022 draft, received a 2022 second-round pick and, importantly, the rights for a pick-swap with Los Angeles's 2023 first-round pick that was owned by the Dream.Another disappointing season, which saw a contract divorce with star center Liz Cambage, kept the Sparks out of the playoffs for the second-straight season. Thus it gifted the Mystics another opportunity to draft a second lottery prospect in as many seasons. Moving back to No. 3 in 2022, Washington got a player, they believe, who was just as capable of being the No. 1 pick in Shakira Austin. The additional pick was just a way to maximize the value of the top selection."This was not one of those situations where we traded down and took a lesser player, we add a player that's capable of being the first pick also," general manager Mike Thibault said on draft night. "And so I think that's the starting point for us is that we felt we got a player who was capable of being the first pick and then got an added bonus and got another player.”Washington's odds sit at 17.8% of winning the No. 1 overall pick. They are behind the Indiana Fever (44.2%) and the Dream (27.6%); the Minnesota Lynx has the fourth-best odds at 10.4%. The order is set by an aggregate of each team's record for the previous two seasons. Odds are fixed year over year.Once again, it's yet another savvy move that paid off for Thibault. Throughout his tenure with the Mystics, the winningest coach in WNBA history has made the most of their draft assets or developing younger players into tradable pieces. It leads the franchise to be active in trade discussions.That aggressiveness got them Elena Delle Donne back in 2017. He got Tina Charles in 2020 with multiple first-rounders from "down" draft classes in 2020 and 2021.No one would say the deal didn't also pay off for Atlanta also. The Dream took Rhyne Howard first overall. By all accounts, Atlanta got a future superstar with the 2022 Rookie of the Year, beating out Austin in the voting. They also will be the recipient of another lottery selection this year, perhaps another top-tier talent to pair with Howard.Many are excited for who the 2023 WNBA Draft class will produce. The class is headlined by one of college basketball's biggest stars, Aliyah Boston (South Carolina). There are also other potential WNBA starters in Diamond Miller (Maryland), Ashley Joens (Iowa State) and Ashley Owusu (Virginia Tech) throughout the list of prospects. The odds may not be in Washington's favor to land Boston at No. 1. However, the Mystics entered the last lottery with the third-best odds and vaulted to the top position.The WNBA Draft Lottery show will be Friday, Nov. 11 at 5:30 on ESPN2. It will be broadcast prior to the blockbuster South Carolina vs. Maryland women's basketball contest.
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