Without a doubt, the WNBA closed its regular season with great excitement and eyes set on the 2025 playoffs. Beyond Napheesa Collier’s dominance with the Minnesota Lynx and the unfortunate injury that slowed down Caitlin Clark, the name that shone brightest was Paige Bueckers. The Dallas Wings shooting guard, selected number one in the 2025 Draft, delivered a rookie campaign that already places her in the conversation of future league legends.
Bueckers ended her first year with a stellar performance: 24 points, 8 rebounds, and 5 assists in the 97-76 win over the Phoenix Mercury. With that, she wrapped up a 36-game season in which she totaled 692 points and 194 assists, numbers that rank her as the third rookie with the most points and assists in WNBA history. She also broke the scoring record for a debutant in Wings history.
Her growth was evident from the start: in her first three games, she recorded 20 assists, and by the fifth game, she exploded as a scorer against the Connecticut Sun with 20 points on a brilliant 8-of-10 shooting. The peak moment came in August, when she made history with 44 points against the Las Vegas Aces, becoming the first rookie to record a 40+ point game.
Paige Bueckers’ 2025 stats:
- 19.2 points per game
- 5.3 assists
- 3.9 rebounds
- 1.6 steals
- 47.6% field goal percentage
- 33.2% three-point percentage
- 89.3% free throw percentage
Despite Dallas’ 10-34 record, the team found in her a key piece to build its future.
Caitlin Clark: the rookie who dominated in 2024
Caitlin Clark’s 2024 season marked a turning point in the WNBA. From her first games, she showed an unstoppable scoring instinct: 17+ points in four of her first five games, plus 19 games with at least 20 points and four with more than 30.
But Clark didn’t just stand out for her shooting. As the weeks went by, she added offensive leadership through her court vision. She finished with 12 games of 10 or more assists and led the entire league with an average of 8.4 per game-unprecedented for a rookie.
Caitlin Clark’s 2024 stats:
- 19.2 points per game
- 8.4 assists
- 5.7 rebounds
- 1.3 steals
- 41.7% field goal percentage
- 34.4% three-point percentage
- 90.6% free throw percentage
Bueckers vs Clark: a luxury tie
Both stars closed their debut year with the same scoring average (19.2), but with different styles. Clark dominated as a playmaker, leading the league in assists, while Bueckers contributed greater shooting efficiency and defensive ability.
What’s clear is that the WNBA wins either way: two generational talents, different in style but equally decisive for the future of women’s basketball. The league is already enjoying their present and dreaming of a rivalry that could define the next decade.
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