Donald Trump continues to drag Stephen A. Smith, and the latest shot was his nastiest one yet. On Wednesday morning, Trump logged onto Truth Social just after sunrise and unloaded on the ESPN star, calling him an “arrogant fool” and a “low IQ individual” who is “dumb as a rock.” The post landed as the back and forth between the two men spilled into a third straight day, and it made clear that Trump has no plans to let this one go. For a feud that started over a basketball game, the temperature has climbed fast.
To understand why Trump keeps coming for Stephen A. Smith, you have to rewind to Monday night. Trump showed up to Game 3 of the NBA Finals between the Spurs and the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, bringing along his granddaughter Kai Trump and Knicks owner James Dolan among others. The Knicks lost. Before the game, Smith had already predicted that Trump’s presence would throw off the building, warning that the security circus and the disruption to local businesses around the Garden would work against the home team. When New York fell, Smith had his receipts ready.
That set up Tuesday, when Stephen A. Smith used his “First Take” platform to fire back with everything he had. He challenged Trump to a debate and said he would put his own IQ up against Trump’s any day of the week. Then he went for the jugular on the optics of the night, questioning why a man who supposedly cared so much about being at the game looked like he was dozing off in his seat. “The brother wasn’t awake,” Smith said, asking why Trump bothered showing up if he was going to nod off courtside. He also hammered the point that businesses near the arena were thriving until the motorcade and the Secret Service shut everything down, even forcing the cancellation of the Knicks watch party outside MSG.
By Wednesday morning, Trump had clearly been stewing. His Truth Social response did not address a single one of Smith’s actual points. Instead he leaned all the way into the insults, branding Stephen A. Smith a “loudmouth huckster” who is “totally unqualified” for office and predicting he would get “annihilated in a debate by the most incompetent of politicians.” Trump even dragged Joe Biden into it, claiming Biden’s rough debate showing would look great next to anything Smith could muster, before signing off with the line that they would “laugh him out of politics.” Later, talking to reporters at JFK before boarding Air Force One, Trump kept it going, saying Smith is a nice guy but lacks the “aptitude” and the “high IQ” you need to run for office.
The whole exchange is dripping with irony, and that is a big reason Stephen A. Smith keeps trending. Just over a year ago, Trump was singing a completely different tune about the broadcaster. He called Smith a “smart guy” with “great entertainment skills” and said he would “love” to see him run for office. Thirteen months and one Knicks loss later, Smith has been moved straight onto Trump’s island of enemies. Smith has teased a possible 2028 presidential run more than once, and the idea clearly lives in Trump’s head, because he keeps circling back to it even while insisting Smith has no shot.
What makes this matchup must watch is that both men are professional talkers who get paid to never blink. Stephen A. Smith built an entire career on the loudest possible takes, and he has already signaled he is just getting started, promising more extensive commentary on his own platform away from ESPN. Trump, for his part, treats Truth Social like an open mic and has never once walked away from a fight he could keep feeding. Neither one is wired to give the other the last word, which means this thing is nowhere near finished.
There is also a bigger picture here that the culture is watching closely. Trump going scorched earth on one of the most prominent Black broadcasters in the country, over criticism that started as nothing more than a sports take, says a lot about how thin the skin runs when the heat comes from inside the entertainment world. Smith made a point of stressing that his original problem with Trump was about the Knicks game and the disruption it caused, not about politics. Trump turned it into an IQ contest anyway. For an audience that has watched Stephen A. Smith go from morning sports debate to a genuine cultural force, seeing him hold his ground against this kind of incoming only adds to the legend.
So Trump continues to drag Stephen A. Smith, and Smith continues to look very much like a man who welcomes the smoke. The debate challenge is still on the table. The 2028 chatter is not going away. And as long as both of them keep talking, the rest of us are going to keep watching. The only real question left is who taps out first, and right now neither one looks remotely close.

