Feb 18, 2026 | 7:04 PM EST

Imago
Source: Stephan A Smith ‘s Instagram/ IMAGO

Imago
Source: Stephan A Smith ‘s Instagram/ IMAGO

Imago
Source: Stephan A Smith ‘s Instagram/ IMAGO

Imago
Source: Stephan A Smith ‘s Instagram/ IMAGO
Stephan A. Smith is mostly known for how blunt he is when calling out someone. We all remember when he called Ben Simmons a “thief” and also his famous statement about LeBron James, where he called him “every GM’s worst nightmare.” When people like LeBron James are not left alone, how did we expect Smith to let go of Tony Clark after the recent news about his resignation?
Watch What’s Trending Now!
In a recent show on ESPN, Stephen A. Smith said, “Tony Clark…damn. This takes sibling rivalry to a new level… You’re 53 years old! Of all the people out there, your sister-in-law… Who is that woman? You understand? Does she work in the MLB office? Do you understand what I’m saying? I mean, damn.”
Tony Clark resigned on February 17, 2026, after serving as the Major League Baseball Players Association executive director since 2013. The resignation arrived before the CBA expiration on December 1, 2026, raising negotiation pressure dramatically for players.
The MLBPA hired his sister-in-law in 2023, placing family inside the union structure in an official staffed role. Internal investigators reportedly found inappropriate relationship evidence, creating serious conflict concerns for leadership accountability standards. Reports said she was married to his brother, Greg Clark, publicly during the investigation period.
“Tony Clark…damn. This takes sibling rivalry to a new level…you’re a grown damn man! How do you let something like this happen? You’re 53 years old! Of all the people out there, your sister-in-law?” – Stephen A. Smith pic.twitter.com/7tUX4uFyHI
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) February 18, 2026
Federal investigators examined Players Way spending, including $3.9 million in documented union funding expenditures records reviewed records. Some reports estimated that Players Way funding reached nearly $10 million between 2019 and 2024 operations. A whistleblower complaint filed in November 2024 triggered a federal probe examining the union’s financial decisions closely and its leadership.
Players reacted emotionally, remembering that Clark guided negotiations ending the 99-day lockout on March 10, 2022, and an agreement was restored. Marcus Semien said the departure hurt, while Tarik Skubal backed Bruce Meyer‘s negotiations leadership. Giancarlo Stanton noted difficult timing, as the union prepared to protect player earnings and futures during talks.
Bruce Meyer now leads the union, facing owners before the December 1, 2026, deadline negotiation battle.
After Tony Clark’s recent “relationships,” Stephan A. Smith went guns blazing, calling him out for allegedly cheating with his brother’s wife. Although Tony Clark is the most recent victim of SAS from MLB, he is not the first.
Tony Clark is not the first from MLB to face the fury of Stephen A. Smith
Stephen A. Smith questioned Mike Trout’s health, saying he was disgusted with Trout’s repeated unavailability.
He asked, “What the hell are you doing to take care of yourself physically?” publicly.
Trout played only 82 games in 2023 after appearing in just 36 games earlier. Those words hit fans harder, watching a three-time MVP struggle to stay healthy. That conversation soon shifted toward Aaron Judge and his incredible offensive dominance numbers.
Smith argued that Juan Soto’s batting behind Judge forced pitchers to attack more. Judge still crushed 51 home runs with 123 RBIs and a 1.198 OPS season. Yet Smith questioned Judge, saying he came up small during crucial playoff moments.
His comments extended toward Juan Soto’s choices and the Mets’ direction during free agency. Smith insisted the Dodgers were Soto’s only excuse to leave a Yankees championship opportunity behind.
He also speculated Soto wasn’t really feeling Aaron Judge, citing a Dominican community conversation. Meanwhile, Mets criticism intensified when Pete Alonso’s future raised questions about organizational direction stability.
The emotional debate deepened when Smith questioned Shohei Ohtani’s baseball marketability globally. He later apologized, writing, “Let me apologize right now,” acknowledging insensitive remarks. That apology showed accountability, especially as Ohtani was delivering historic MVP-winning performances. gaining worldwide attention.
Still, fans remembered the moment, feeling baseball’s global face deserved unwavering public respect.


