New York Post

WNBA mock draft

- —Jonathan Lehman

No. 22 is about to be No. 1.

Caitlin Clark, the transcende­nt Iowa superstar who set college scoring records by the threeful and in recent weeks made women’s basketball one of America’s most-watched television shows, will join the Indiana Fever as the No. 1 pick in the WNBA draft on Monday night.

OK, that’s the layup portion of these prediction­s.

How will the rest of a draft night with historic levels of anticipati­on — college stars such as LSU’s Angel Reese, South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso and Stanford’s Cameron Brink will join Clark at the festivitie­s in Brooklyn — shake out?

(Quick reminder: Would-be lottery pick Paige Bueckers has said she will return to UConn, and underclass­men such as USC star JuJu Watkins are ineligible for the WNBA draft.)

Here are our projection­s for the first round:

No. 1 Indiana Fever Caitlin Clark, Iowa, PG

The questions around the all-time NCAA leading scorer already have moved past whether Clark will land in Indiana — imagine if the Fever trade the pick after all this, though, what a hoot that would be! — to whether she’ll be a top-10 player or merely an All-Star as a rookie. Fatigue and highly motivated defenders will work against her, but she’ll also have the best teammates she’s ever had.

No. 2 Los Angeles Sparks Cameron Brink, Stanford, PF

In Brink, you’re getting the best defender in college basketball (3.7 blocks, 11.9 rebounds per game as a senior). That’s the worst case. At best, you’re getting an inside-out, rimprotect­ing, capable-shooting unicorn.

No. 3 Chicago Sky Rickea Jackson, Tennessee, SF

The rebuilding Sky need scoring, and Jackson (20.2 points per game) is a pro-ready bucket. She more than held her own against WNBA competitio­n when Tennessee played Team USA in an exhibition in the fall. Some of the same chatter about Jackson’s inconsiste­nt motor followed 2022 No. 1 overall pick Rhyne Howard, and she leveled up once she reached the league.

No. 4 Los Angeles Sparks Kamilla Cardoso, South Carolina, C

Had a mind to send the 6-foot-7 Cardoso to the Sky at No. 3 and then have her joined as teammates by former SEC grudge-match combatant Angel Reese (don’t worry, we’ll get to her). Instead, the two-time national champion and one of the co-stars of a forthcomin­g Omaha Production­s documentar­y heads to Hollywood, where she’ll get plenty of reps to develop her offensive game.

No. 5 Dallas Wings Nyadiew Puoch, Australia, SF/PF

This is less any specific insight about Puoch, a 20-year-old Aussie who “has placed herself firmly on the radar because of her elite defense,” according to The Next. It’s more an expectatio­n of the often-confoundin­g Wings doing something to puzzle everyone tuning in to see their college faves.

No. 6 Washington Mystics Aaliyah Edwards, UConn, PF

Last seen committing the controvers­ial offensive foul that sent Iowa past UConn into the title game, Edwards (17.6 points, 9.2 rebounds) is a high-motor, high-IQ player with the Geno Auriemma imprint (Huskies have a way of succeeding in the WNBA) and room to grow on offense. The Mystics have questions at the power forward spot with Elena Delle Donne saying she’ll sit out this season.

No. 7 Chicago Sky Angel Reese, LSU, PF

You might be thinking: “What?!? How is Reese so low — she put up monster stats, was the best player on a title team and is one of the faces of the sport!” Well, there are also pressing questions about how Reese’s game will translate: Can she continue her signature offensive rebounding rate (6.0 per game over two LSU seasons) against pros? Will her awkward-angle finishing and utter lack of shooting remove her as a scoring threat? What about that mystery midseason absence?

No. 8 Minnesota Lynx Jacy Sheldon, Ohio State, SG

Sheldon is a lower-ceiling prospect with a reasonably high floor: a strong leader and relentless perimeter defender who shot a career-high 37.3 percent from 3 on five attempts per game in 2023-24. Cheryl Reeve seems almost constituti­onally incapable of turning out a lottery team, but if there’s any way of securing the No. 1 pick in 2025 and bringing Bueckers home to Minnesota, the Lynx have to get it done.

No. 9 Dallas Wings Charisma Osborne, UCLA, SG

The Wings continue to search for the right complement to Arike Ogunbowale in the backcourt. Osborne, a five-year icon of the Bruins program, can guard the ball, even at 5-foot-9.

No. 10 Connecticu­t Sun Alissa Pili, Utah, PF

Pili is one of best offensive prospects on the board: 21.4 points per game and knockdown 40.4 percent shooting from 3 from the center spot as a senior. But can she guard anyone? She’s likely not big enough for 5s (her listed height of 6-foot-2 is almost surely a fiction) and not quick enough for 4s.

No. 11 New York Liberty Nika Muhl, UConn, PG

The Liberty need a defensive bulldog in the perimeter rotation behind Courtney Vandersloo­t and Sabrina Ionescu. Mühl can submit tape of her shift against Clark in the national semifinals (or against Watkins in the Elite Eight) as Exhibit A for drafting her. Plus, Mühl has talked about how she received seasonchan­ging advice from Liberty superstar and fellow UConn product Breanna Stewart. There are dots to connect.

No. 12 Atlanta Dream Dyaisha Fair, Syracuse, PG

With the spotlight on Clark, Fair quietly moved up this season to No. 3 on the all-time Division I women’s scoring chart with 3,403 points (albeit in five years). The Dream could use some backcourt scoring. Other names to watch in the late first round: Elizabeth Kitley, Marquesha Davis, Jessika Carter.

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