San Antonio Express-News

Raucous crowd greets Clark in home debut

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Caitlin Clark walked into her new home arena Thursday night with No. 22 shirts and jerseys peppered from floor to ceiling.

She left as a first-time WNBA winner.

A late-arriving but louder-than-usual crowd roared during her official introducti­on to Fever fans and again when Clark made her first basket, a layup with 7:00 left in the first quarter. The cheers grew when she completed a threepoint play a few minutes later and hit a crescendo when she finally made a long 3-pointer from the edge of the fieldhouse logo late in the third quarter.

Yes, Clark successful­ly navigated the city's most anticipate­d rookie debut since Peyton Manning played for the NFL'S Indianapol­is Colts in 1998 even though it wasn't quite the start most expected.

In an 83-80 preseason victory over the Atlanta Dream, Clark had 12 points, eight rebounds, six assists and six turnovers, going 4 of 12 from the field and 2 of 9 on 3s in 31 minutes.

“It was a lot of fun, I thought they were loud, I thought they were into it. It was fun to see,” Clark said following her home debut. “This is a preseason game on a Thursday night and there's 13,000 people here. I think that just shows you what it's going to be like for us all season. It's going to help us.”

The crowd certainly made a difference Thursday as Clark helped the Fever rally from an early double-digit deficit following

last week's preseason opening loss at Dallas.

One girl held a sign that read “Welcome to Indy Caitlin! — Caitlin M.”

Officially, the attendance came in at 13,028 — nearly three times larger than the slightly more than 4,000 per game Indiana averaged for its 20 regular-season home games in 2023. Afterward, Clark found close friend and former college teammate Gabbie Marshall and the two took a photo together.

Most of the fans came to see Clark — even for a reschedule­d contest.

Indiana was initially scheduled to play Friday but moved the game when the NBA announced

the Indiana Pacers and New York Knicks would play Game 3 of their best-of-seven series in that time slot.

For Clark, the WNBA'S overall No. 1 draft pick, it's been a quick transition from playing college ball a month ago to the pro style. And this game didn't come with as much pomp and circumstan­ce as might have been expected.

Clark went through her pregame warmups quietly and focused as music blared and the stands started filling up. But once the game started, Clark & Co. were all business.

“I don't think I was that effective, honestly,” Clark said. “I thought more than anything I did

a really good job of passing the ball, finding my teammates. Obviously, I would have liked to have made a couple more 3s, but sometimes that's how you shoot it.”

The fault didn't fall entirely on Clark's shoulders.

Opponents are naturally game-planning to slow down the top scorer in NCAA Division I history.

Atlanta's ploy was to challenge Clark with hard closeouts, multiple defenders forcing the ball out of her hands and physical play intended to get Clark off her spot.

The result: Clark struggled early as the Fever fell behind, and her teammates struggled to convert her crisp passes

into points. But they also got a glimpse into what this season could be.

“She pushes the pace for us, she gets the ball where it needs to be, if you run the floor you've got to look up because the ball is coming,” said Nalyssa Smith, who had a game-high 21 points. “She can spread the floor, everybody can score and she's looking to pass the ball.”

The curiosity surroundin­g Clark has some opponents moving games to larger venues to accommodat­e ticket sales and a team that hasn't been to the playoffs since 2016 will now have 36 of its 40 regular-season games on national television.

For Clark, playing in front of full arena has become the norm. For her teammates and coaches, this could be the start of something bigger than they could have imagined. Especially when it comes to a generation­al-type player such as Clark, who has fully embraced her new home city.

“For me, this is the best part of it,” Clark said. “You've got to go out and compete every single night and if one night is not good for us, you have an opportunit­y to come back a couple days later and respond. I think this group will be ready (for the regular season) and everybody's excited.”

Toronto eyed for expansion team

The Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n reported that the WNBA has awarded a franchise to the Kilmer Group. The reported deal would have Toronto's WNBA team start playing in May 2026.

The WNBA did not confirm the report.

Larry Tanenbaum is the chairman and CEO of Kilmer Group and the chairman of the board for Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainm­ent, which owns the NBA'S Toronto Raptors and NHL'S Toronto Maple Leafs. He also owns 25% of MLSE through Kilmer's holdings.

Adding a team in Toronto would be the first outside of the U.S. for the WNBA, which begins its 28th season next week.

The new Toronto club would be the 14th team in the WNBA. An expansion franchise in northern California is set to join the league in 2025.

 ?? Darron Cummings/associated Press ?? Caitlin Clark struggled at times in her home debut, turning the ball over six times in Thursday’s preseason win.
Darron Cummings/associated Press Caitlin Clark struggled at times in her home debut, turning the ball over six times in Thursday’s preseason win.

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