ESPN Noticed A Huge Change With Caitlin Clark’s Appearance That Should Put The Entire WNBA….
ESPN Noticed A Huge Change With Caitlin Clark’s Appearance That Should Put The Entire WNBA On Notice
Early on in the rookie season of Caitlin Clark, she was getting pushed around a lot by other players.
The women in the WNBA are simply much bigger and leaner than she was, and it was clear she was not playing college players anymore.
Instead of crying about it, Caitlin Clark got into the lab and got to work.
During this week’s game between the Indiana Fever and Dallas Wings, ESPN announcers noted that Clark had added several pounds of muscle to her frame since being drafted.
The difference in her arms was incredibly notable, as a side-by-side picture clearly shows the difference in size.
Putting on muscle helps greatly with dealing with players who are banging as much as WNBA players do.
Caitlin Clark is known for her long-range shots, but she also attacks the baskets with reckless abandon, willing to do anything to secure victories for her squad.
Fever guard Caitlin Clark recorded the first triple-double by a rookie in WNBA history on Saturday in Indiana’s 83-78 victory over the first-place New York Liberty in Indianapolis.
Clark pulled down her 10th rebound at the 7:07 mark of the fourth quarter, giving her the triple-double. She finished the game with 19 points, a season-high-tying 13 assists and 12 rebounds.
Clark pulled down her 10th rebound at the 7:07 mark of the fourth quarter, giving her the triple-double. She finished the game with 19 points, a season-high-tying 13 assists and 12 rebounds.
Clark, who wears No. 22, reached the triple-double in the 22nd game of her WNBA career. It was also the first triple-double in Fever history, going back to the launch of the franchise in 2000. Clark had 17 triple-doubles in her college career at Iowa — and the Hawkeyes won all those games.
“Obviously, it’s cool,” Clark said of the triple-double. “My teammates have been finishing the ball [at a] really, really high rate. My assist numbers, that’s because of them.”
Clark, though, was more excited about the fact that the Fever beat the Liberty, ending the franchise’s nine-game losing streak to New York. Clark and the Fever had lost three times to the Liberty earlier this season, two of them in 36-point blowouts.
“I’m just happy we won,” Clark said. “I take a lot of pride in being able to do a lot of different things for this team. I think we’re really good when I can get the ball off the glass and just go in transition and find my teammates and set them up.”
The Fever rallied from a deficit of 11 points in the fourth quarter, outscoring the Liberty 28-12 over the last 8:10 of the game. According to Elias Sports Bureau, the comeback tied as the WNBA’s second-largest in the fourth quarter against the team with the league’s best record. The Liberty entered Saturday 17-3.
Clark’s triple-double was also the first in league history against the team with the best record at that time. The No. 1 pick in the 2024 WNBA draft, Clark had come close to a triple-double before this season, including missing by one rebound in the Fever’s victory at Phoenix on June 30.
“We’re definitely playing good basketball … we’re playing together better,” Clark said. “But I think the biggest difference for us has been when teams make runs, we don’t crumble. We always believe we’re in the games.”
The Fever, 9-13, held New York to 10 of 42 shooting from behind the arc (23.8%). Indiana wasn’t much better from long range (7 of 24, 29.2%) but made 12 of 14 free throws and outrebounded New York 41-31.