After a fifth straight question directed only at Clark, the rookie guard tried to get reporters to pay attention to her teammate
Clark and Boston took the podium together, but the focus was all on the rookie at first. After the fifth straight question directed at Clark, she tried to redirect reporters toward Boston, who was sitting quietly and staring at the stat sheet in her hands.
“Ask Aliyah a question,” Clark said.
“No, I’m good,” Boston said, sounding resigned, but Clark insisted.
The next reporter then directed the question, about practice, to Boston, followed by a few more.
Thursday marked the second and final time this season Indiana would travel to Seattle to play; the moment, while awkward, was a little inevitable, as Seattle journalists only had the chance to get quotes from Clark twice this season. Still, the uncomfortable situation eventually passed.
Clark and Boston, the past two No. 1 overall picks, have become a strong duo on the Fever and have praised each other throughout the season. Although the rookie has gotten more attention, Clark has often tried to push attention toward Boston, the reigning Rookie of the Year and a key piece of the Fever on both sides of the court.
After Thursday’s loss and a tight loss to the Chicago Sky last weekend, Indiana is 7-12 and sits ninth in the WNBA standings. The Fever play the 9-8 Phoenix Mercury on Sunday and will hope to reverse the skid.
Relative Articles
None found