logo
WNBA power rankings: 'Tenacity' on defense key for Indiana Fever squad looking to rise with Caitlin Clark back in the fold

WNBA power rankings: 'Tenacity' on defense key for Indiana Fever squad looking to rise with Caitlin Clark back in the fold

Yahoo5 days ago
The first professional clash of Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers lived up to the hype. But it was more of an enticing lead-in to what the future head-to-head competitions hold for these two Naismith winners, rather than a close contest of counterpunches.
For as much fun as it is to watch them individually, their teams aren't at the same level to make this an equal matchup. The main differentiator between the two was as clear after the Indiana Fever's runaway 19-point victory as it was before the point guards took the court.
Advertisement
Clark is aided by a front office that invested heavily following back-to-back No. 1 draft picks in 2023 and 2024. Bueckers is the foundational piece in a field of building blocks the Dallas Wings organization hasn't pieced together yet. Closing in on the All-Star break, the Wings (6-16) are five games back of a playoff spot. The Fever (11-10), while inconsistent, are still capable of breaking into the top four.
If they're to do that, they need more of what they saw from Clark on Sunday, which was more than just the points, 3s and even assists with which she dazzles fans.
The data: Five steals, matching a career-high. (Most came off Bueckers, who tied a career high with four turnovers.) One block, tying 6-foot-5 center Aliyah Boston's game total. Seven deflections, according to head coach Stephanie White.
After the 102-83 win on Sunday that closed a 2-0 homestand, White praised Clark's defensive vision and ability to stay disciplined with hands in the passing lane to tip and steal, rather than bite on a defender and need help.
Advertisement
'That's what it's going to take from her consistently,' White said. 'She's got to be able to bring the offense and the defense on the other end of the floor. And she's continued to grow in that area throughout the course of the season. And for us to accomplish the things that we want to accomplish, she's got to take more pride in that.'
White came from coaching an elite Connecticut Sun defense ranked first in scoring and top-three in steals. Defense was how they won games. In Indiana, it's more than limiting the opponent's output. It has to be an offensive strategy, and a winning one that led to a Fever feast on the Wings.
'For us to play in transition, we've got to lock in on the defensive end,' White said.
That fast-paced offense in which Clark thrives needs a starting point. It's typically defensive rebounds, tipped passes and steals. Because, for as much as Clark is known for her logo 3s, she's exquisite at 50-foot-plus passes on a dime:
And this:
One more look (seriously, this touchdown pass over the outstretched hand of Myisha Hines-Allen is absurd):
Clark hasn't quite broken out of a shooting slump that's hampered her second WNBA season, a potential result of injuries (hamstring, quad) that also limited her availability. She hasn't cracked two 3s in a game since June 17 against Connecticut, and only eclipsed 30% shooting from range once in that span.
Advertisement
'I feel like I'm a couple shots away from having a really good game,' Clark said.
The beauty of her talent, and that of those around her, is that she doesn't always need them to fall. The Fever scored the most points in a first half (64) of any team this season for a 22-point halftime lead.
As Clark looked down the box score after the game, she noted the balance in shot attempts by the entire team. Kelsey Mitchell had 12 (made eight), Boston 11 (made seven). Natasha Howard and Makayla Timpson had nine each. Six players scored by the end of the first quarter. They had seven assists on 11 baskets, leading to 30 total assists on 40 made baskets.
Clark dished a season-high 13 assists in her fifth double-double. It was her 17th career 10-assist outing. The 17 point-assist double-doubles are tied for fifth all-time. Courtney Vandersloot (62), Sue Bird (28), Alyssa Thomas (28), Ticha Penicheiro (18) and Natasha Cloud (17) have all played at least 300 games.
Advertisement
In Indiana's best performances, Clark's defense shone. She had four blocks and two steals in the season-opening crushing of Chicago. In a June win over New York, she had one steal and two blocks. Weeks prior, she had zeros (as well as 10 turnovers, which is another matter entirely. Clark tied her season-low two against Dallas on Sunday.) The win over Seattle featured a previous-high three steals.
'I can be a really good defender when I choose to and when I work really hard on it, and not conserve energy,' Clark said. '[I'm] proud of myself in that regard. I think that probably motivates our offense. When I bring a tenacity on the defensive end, I think it really helps our offense go.'
Indiana isn't going to, nor should it, be a defensive juggernaut in line with White's Sun squads. It merely needs to do enough to jump-start the type of offensive plays that can demoralize opponents.
Yahoo Sports performer of the week: Alyssa Thomas, Mercury
No Kah or Satou, no problem for Alyssa Thomas.
Advertisement
The point-forward scored 29 points with 8 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 steals to lead Phoenix over the league-best Minnesota Lynx despite being without Kahleah Copper and Satou Sabally.
The Mercury have quietly made their claim as one of the WNBA's best while dealing with various injuries and absences. Thomas, known as 'The Engine,' has kept them going as one of the league's best facilitators and reliable scorers. She averaged 23 points, 7 rebounds and 8 assists this week, including a one-point win over Golden State.
Game Night of the week
Wednesday, the final day of play before All-Star weekend, is a doozy.
Advertisement
Mercury at Lynx (1 p.m. ET, League Pass): The surging Mercury face the formerly dominant Lynx again in another camp day game between the two powerhouses. Phoenix is coming off an eight-point victory despite playing without two of its three stars (or maybe it's now four?) It's the final of four matchups and could be needed for a tiebreaker at season's end. The Lynx lead, 2-1.
Fever at Liberty (7:30 p.m. ET, CBS Sports Network): The Fever make their first of two visits in seven days to New York's Barclays Center in what should be a raucous, sold-out environment. They split the first two in Indiana, and these games could also play into tiebreakers.
Also on Wednesday: Dream at Sky (12 p.m.), Valkyries at Storm (3 p.m.), Aces at Wings (8 p.m.)
WNBA power rankings (Hassan Ahmad/Yahoo Sports illustration)
Yahoo Sports power poll
1. Phoenix Mercury (15-6)
2. New York Liberty (14-6)
3. Minnesota Lynx (19-4)
4. Golden State Valkyries (10-11)
5. Indiana Fever (11-10)
6. Atlanta Dream (12-9)
7. Seattle Storm (13-9)
8. Washington Mystics (11-10)
9. Las Vegas Aces (10-11)
10. Chicago Sky (7-14)
11. Dallas Wings (6-16)
12. Los Angeles Sparks (7-14)
13. Connecticut Sun (3-18)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will Curt Cignetti and Indiana football make noise at Big Ten media days? What you need to know
Will Curt Cignetti and Indiana football make noise at Big Ten media days? What you need to know

Indianapolis Star

time9 minutes ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Will Curt Cignetti and Indiana football make noise at Big Ten media days? What you need to know

BLOOMINGTON — Indiana football heads to Las Vegas on Monday for the 2025 Big Ten media days. The three-day event will run from July 22-24 at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino with all 18 teams from the league in attendance. The Hoosiers will help kick off the event Tuesday along with Illinois, Rutgers, Maryland, Nebraska and Ohio State. Indiana coaches and players will make the rounds for interviews with various television networks and reporters from across the country. Here's everything you need to know about this year's event: The Big Ten Network will air Cignetti's initial news conference live Tuesday. Cignetti and IU players will also sit down for interviews during the network's live special that day from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., but times have yet to be announced. IndyStar, the Herald-Times and USA Today Network outlets will be on hand. Each of the league's 18 teams will be represented by its head coach and three student-athletes. Cignetti chose linebacker Aiden Fisher, wide receiver Elijah Sarratt and defensive end Mikail Kamara to join him in Las Vegas. They had success for Cignetti last year after following him from James Madison to Bloomington and will be three of the most veteran players on the roster in 2025 with 110 games (86 starts) of experience between them. Fisher and Kamara earned All-American honors last season, and all three of them made the All-Big Ten team. There wasn't a dull moment at last year's Big Ten media days when Cignetti had a microphone in front of him. He talked about getting rid of 'dead wood' in the portal, dissed the Rose Bowl as just an 'old stadium,' took some parting shots at JMU's wannabe rival Coastal Carolina and gave his TED talk on self-imposed limitations. 'Oh, if we got to a bowl it's a great year, bull----,' Cignetti said. 'That ain't the goal, the goal is to be the best.' Cignetti used the moment to generate buzz back at home in Bloomington as part of his quest to get fans to buy into a program that hadn't done much to reward their enthusiasm in recent years. It was an extension of the infamous speech he gave at Assembly Hall on the day he was introduced as coach. Indiana's College Football Playoff appearance solidified the increasing buzz surrounding the program and resulted in record ticket sales ahead of the 2025 season. So what now? Cignetti doesn't want IU to fade into the background while he eyes building a perennial contender. Big Ten media days will give him the platform to make sure fans across the country know the Hoosiers aren't going anywhere. Mikail Kamara likes to say he spoke Indiana's success into existence last season. He was an early believer in the group Cignetti assembled that included a large contingent of Kamara's teammates from James Madison. Kamara told reporters they were destined for big things before IU even wrapped up spring camp. Kamara echoed that sentiment as the first Hoosiers player to start openly talking about making the College Football Playoff on the heels of a 41-24 win over Northwestern that left them as one of just nine unbeaten teams left in the country at 6-0. 'The only way for you to see that future is to manifest it,' Kamara said last season. 'That's kind of always been my thing.' Kamara will be able to reveal what he's manifesting for the Hoosiers in 2025 on his business trip out to Las Vegas.

Napheesa Collier's record-breaking performance leads her team to victory in WNBA All-Star Game

time14 minutes ago

Napheesa Collier's record-breaking performance leads her team to victory in WNBA All-Star Game

INDIANAPOLIS -- Napheesa Collier scored a record 36 points to help her team beat Team Clark 151-131 in the WNBA All-Star Game that was devoid of defense and full of 4-point shots. This record offensive effort came a year after the league's annual exhibition game was a competitive contest that pitted the U.S Olympic team against WNBA All-Stars. The game capped off a weekend where negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement took centerstage. Players wore warmup shirts before the game that said 'Pay us what you owe us.' Collier was named the game's MVP. As she waited to get her trophy the crowd chanted 'Pay them more' and All-Star Brittney Sykes held up a sign saying 'Pay the Players.' Captain Caitlin Clark was unable to play for her team because of a groin injury she suffered earlier this week. She still served as ambassador for the weekend. Known for her deep logo 3-pointers, Clark would have loved a chance at the 4-point shot that was added to this game which was 28-feet from the basket. Both teams took advantage of the deep shot en route to the record-setting offensive night. The 151 points scored by Team Collier broke the mark put up by Team Stewart of 143 in 2023 for the most in an All-Star Game. Collier's point total broke Arike Ogunbowale's previous record of 34 points scored last year. The combined total of 282 also surpassed the previous high total of 270 set in 2023. While there was little defense played, both teams challenged plays in the fourth quarter with the game not in doubt. One was successful and one wasn't. The game also featured rookies Paige Bueckers, Sonia Citron and Kiki Iriafen making up the largest rookie contingent at the game since 2011. Citron and Iriafen were on Team Clark, and Bueckers was a starter for Napheesa Collier's team. Kelsey Mitchell of the Indiana Fever and Jackie Young of the Las Vegas Aces were announced earlier in the day as starters for Team Clark replacing Clark and Satou Sabally of Phoenix. Mitchell received a loud ovation from the fans who were happy to have another one of their players in the starting lineup. Young didn't actually start or play in the game as Gabby Williams took her spot as a starter. Young injured her hip in Las Vegas' last game before All-Star weekend. Besides the 4-point shot, the game also included a 20-second shot clock instead of the normal 24 and the ability for teams to substitute during live play. There also were no free throws shot — not that there usually are many in an All-Star Game — until the final two minutes of the game. Instead players were automatically awarded the points. The only free throws were shot was by Skylar Diggins with 1:01 left in the game. She made both. All four rules had been used at some point during previous All-Star Games, but not all in the same one. The All-Star Game brought the stars out in Indianapolis. Rapper GloRilla performed at halftime while musicians Common and Jennifer Hudson sat courtside near WNBA legends Lisa Leslie and Tamika Catchings. Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton sat in a suite and got the loudest ovation from the crowd when he was shown on the videoboard.

Brewers hold off Dodgers again for 9th straight win

time40 minutes ago

Brewers hold off Dodgers again for 9th straight win

LOS ANGELES -- Freddy Peralta won his seventh straight start, Isaac Collins and Joey Ortiz homered, and the Milwaukee Brewers held off the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-7 on Saturday night to extend their win streak to a season-best nine. Shohei Ohtani hit his National League-leading 33rd homer and drove in three runs for the Dodgers. Tommy Edman and Miguel Rojas both went deep in the eighth to pull the NL West leaders to 8-7. But then Ohtani's flyball died on the warning track to end the eighth, and Trevor Megill threw a 1-2-3 ninth for his 23rd save as Los Angeles lost for the ninth time in 11 games. Milwaukee improved to 5-0 against the defending World Series champions, including a three-game sweep at home last week. Peralta (12-4) wasn't particularly sharp, giving up four runs and five hits in five innings as his ERA rose from 2.66 to 2.85. But the Brewers tacked on three insurance runs to maintain the lead after he exited, and the All-Star right-hander became the first 12-game winner in the majors. After the teams traded four-run rallies in the third, the Brewers took a 5-4 lead on Collins' 363-foot homer over the short right-field wall in the fourth. They made it 6-4 on Caleb Durbin's RBI double in the sixth. The Dodgers pulled to 6-5 in the sixth when Edman snapped an 0-for-29 skid with a single and Ohtani sliced an RBI single to left. Milwaukee pushed it to 7-5 in the seventh when Andrew Vaughn hit a two-out RBI single, and 8-5 in the eighth on Ortiz's homer. Los Angeles starter Emmet Sheehan (1-1) allowed five runs and seven hits in three-plus innings. Peralta prevented an even bigger rally in the third when, with four runs in, a runner on third and no outs, he struck out Andy Pages, got Michael Conforto to ground out to shortstop with the infield in and retired Edman on a fly to left. The Dodgers were hitting .157 with four runs in four-plus games against the Brewers this season before scoring four times in the third. Dodgers left-hander Clayton Kershaw (4-1, 3.88 ERA) faces Brewers lefty Jose Quintana (6-3, 3.28) in Sunday's series finale.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store