Antelope Valley Press

Clark, Reese headline list of draft invitees

- By DOUG FEINBERG

NEW YORK — Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese headline a list of 15 college players who have been invited to the WNBA draft on Monday, the league announced Thursday.

Clark, who is the career leading scorer in Division I men’s and women’s basketball, is expected to go first to the Indiana Fever. It’s the second consecutiv­e year that the Fever have the top pick.

“There’s a tremendous amount of excitement now with having back-to-back picks,” Indiana GM Lin Dunn said. “And I think, you’ve seen a great deal of interest in ticket sales around this pick, and I think we’re all excited about adding another top pick to this young team. So is there a lot going on? Is there a lot of noise? Is there a lot of excitement? Absolutely.”

The Iowa star helped the NCAA Tournament have its highest ratings ever, including 18.9 million people tuning in for the championsh­ip game won by South Carolina over Clark’s team.

Reese helped LSU win the NCAA championsh­ip in 2023 and is expected to go somewhere in the first round.

Other players invited to attend the draft at the Brooklyn Academy of Music include Stanford star Cameron Brink and South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso. The 6-foot-7 center helped the Gamecocks complete the 10th undefeated season in NCAA Division I history. She earned Most Outstandin­g Player honors of the Final Four.

The other 11 invitees are Rickea Jackson of Tennessee; Aliyah Edwards and Nika Muhl of UConn; Elizabeth Kitley of Virginia Tech; Charisma Osborne of UCLA; Celeste Taylor and Jacy Sheldon of Ohio State; Alissa Pili of Utah; Marquesha Davis of Mississipp­i; Dyaisha Fair of Syracuse; and Nyadiew Puoch of Australia.

The Los Angeles Sparks hold the second and fourth pick with Chicago selecting third. Dallas is fifth and Washington sixth.

Minnesota, Chicago, Dallas, Connecticu­t, New York and Atlanta close out the first round.

In all there are three rounds and 36 picks total.

“You know, the hardest part of this conversati­on every year is the reality that second and third-round picks have a really hard time making WNBA rosters,” ESPN analyst Rebecca Lobo said. “First-round picks that go late have a hard time making WNBA rosters. We talk about a league of 144. It’s not a league of 144. Many of these teams only carry 11 players and maybe by the end of the season they can carry a 12th.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Iowa guard Caitlin Clark walks to the bench during the second half of the women’s NCAA championsh­ip game against South Carolina, Sunday, in Cleveland.
Associated Press Iowa guard Caitlin Clark walks to the bench during the second half of the women’s NCAA championsh­ip game against South Carolina, Sunday, in Cleveland.

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