INDIANAPOLIS — Caitlin Clark getting the WNBA rookie assist record, of course, couldn’t have happened quietly. For starters, the Indiana Fever decimated the Seattle Storm 92-75 Sunday afternoon. It got so bad that Clark and teammates Lexie Hull and Kelsey Mitchell carouseled the spotlight basically every other possession. Clark also picked up her fifth technical foul this year.
With about seven minutes to go in the third quarter, and the Fever up 43-38, Clark smacked the stanchion of the basket to get her tech. It was puzzling at first. The Storm had turned over the ball. But Clark later explained it was out of frustration for missing beyond the arc the play prior.
“[The ref] told me it was disrespectful to the game of basketball,” Clark said afterward. “I don’t know. It reminded me of the technical I got in college where I said damn it, where it’s like a personal frustration. Had nothing to do with the reffing, had nothing to do with the other team.”
“I thought we got a lot better after [the ref] did that,” Clark added. “So I want to thank him.”
CC on her tech: “[The ref] told me it was disrespectful to the game of basketball… reminded me of the technical I got in college where I said dammit, where it’s like a personal frustration…. but I think he fired me up to continue to play a lot harder… so I want to thank him.” pic.twitter.com/gkDMoXcI0X
— Matthew Byrne (@MatthewByrne1) August 18, 2024
Clark also said that once Fever timeout arrived midway through the quarter, or two minutes after the tech, she and her teammates could finally catch their breaths. It hadn’t been an easygoing first half like Friday night versus the Phoenix Mercury. Clark missed all five of her shots from deep and had more turnovers than assists, though the two to Hull gave her 225 for the rookie record.
Clark also said that once Fever timeout arrived midway through the quarter, or two minutes after the tech, she and her teammates could finally catch their breaths. It hadn’t been an easygoing first half like Friday night versus the Phoenix Mercury. Clark missed all five of her shots from deep and had more turnovers than assists, though the two to Hull gave her 225 for the rookie record.
Even the third quarter was an absolute grind. Seattle is the fourth-best team in the WNBA and had won all three prior meetings with the Fever this season. Their length defensively is always an obstacle to deal with. After the timeout, the Fever and Storm traded shots until the buzzer. They traded blocks. Clark denied Sami Whitcomb and got swatted by Ezi Magbegor in return.
Fever start 2-0 after Olympic Break, beat two teams above .500
The Fever scored 35 points in the first half. They then scored 33 points in the final quarter to blow past the Storm. Just like Friday, Mitchell led the team with 16 second-half points and turned on an extra gear to assist the win. Yet there’s another identical theme here: the Fever getting fired up and using that afterburn to fuel wins over two top-half teams this weekend.
Aliyah Boston battling in the paint for Indiana in both games—over foes like Brittney Griner, Nneka Ogwumike, and Magbegor—is the perfect symbolism.
On Friday, Mitchell and Natasha Cloud on Phoenix both received technicals and got in each other’s faces. Mitchell said those moments can spike up teams. Clark had an almost identical response Sunday: that the Fever only got better after her tech. Certainly, another sellout crowd played into it. Fever fans have been there since day one. Players are recycling it into big wins.
“These fans have just been crazy and so into it,” Clark said. “Especially with how we started the season, I feel like they definitely deserve it. And I think they’re starting to see the potential this team has when we play the way we’re supposed to… the assist record is cool too. Obviously [Ticha Penicheiro, who Clark passed] is somebody that’s been very supportive of myself.”
The Fever are in seventh in the WNBA, in the playoffs by three games. The Atlanta Dream are in ninth, the cutoff, and have also won back-to-back games over top-half teams. But it doesn’t matter. As long as the Fever keep playing like this, they’ll outlast anyone into the 2024 playoffs.
Matthew Byrne is the Indiana Fever reporter at ClutchPoints. Originally from New Jersey, Matthew graduated from Indiana University’s Media School in May 2024. He loves bagel breakfast sandwiches and revitalizing the midrange game in pickup basketball.
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