The Indiana Fever began this summer with promise. A young core led by Caitlin Clark had the look of a team ready to finally push its way back into the playoff conversation. Instead, the story has turned into a war of attrition.
Head coach Stephanie White summed it up in early August: “This league’s schedule is unforgiving. It’s relentless. And when you’re already dealing with injuries, it doesn’t give you a second to breathe.” Those words now feel prophetic. The Fever haven’t had a chance to catch their breath since Clark first went down, and the spiral has only gotten worse.
Across the league, stars have fought their way back. Atlanta’s Rhyne Howard was back in uniform within a month of her knee injury. Minnesota’s Napheesa Collier needed just 22 days to recover from a sprained ankle before torching Indiana with 32 points in her return. Fans of those teams celebrated. Fever fans? They’re still waiting.
Clark has now missed 15 straight games. Reports from The Athletic’s Zena Keita and Sabreena Merchant suggest she hasn’t even resumed practicing – the first step toward a return. Meanwhile, Indiana’s other wounds have compounded: Sophie Cunningham, Sydney Colson, and Aari McDonald are all out for the season.
A Silver Lining for the WNBA, But Not for Indiana
The WNBA’s injury cloud has had rare rays of sunlight – Howard and Collier’s comebacks chief among them – but none of that glow has reached Indianapolis. For the Fever, Clark’s stalled recovery from a groin issue and a bone bruise is more than just a setback. It’s a breaking point.
The front office tried to patch the holes by extending veteran Shey Peddy’s hardship contract. Kelsey Mitchell has shouldered a heavier scoring load. Odyssey Sims has provided sparks off the bench. But without Clark, the Fever’s margin for error has evaporated. At 20-18, they’re clinging to postseason hopes that grow thinner by the day.
The Other Side of the Spotlight
Even while sidelined, Clark remains the center of attention. Just before Indiana’s 95-75 win over Seattle, she launched her new “CC” logo with Nike. Fans at Gainbridge Fieldhouse were handed commemorative shirts, and Clark sat courtside in a custom outfit dripping with the brand’s imprint. Social media lit up, but the buzz didn’t change the scoreboard.
Clark is still the Fever’s face of the future, and her cultural impact is undeniable. But White isn’t coaching billboards or brand launches. She’s trying to win games in a league that gives teams little room for setbacks. And right now, the biggest setback shows no sign of ending.
The WNBA calendar doesn’t slow down, and the Fever have no choice but to fight through it. Mitchell, Sims, and Peddy will carry the backcourt as long as Clark is out. White’s team will lean on grit more than firepower.
But for Indiana fans, the lingering question is the same one Keita voiced on No Offseason: will Caitlin Clark even play again this year? The league’s silver linings keep shining elsewhere. In Indianapolis, the skies remain cloudy.
Read the full article here