NBA

Indiana Fever at Chicago Sky

· Women's National Basketball Association
16-16, 7-11 Away
Final
81 - 100

11-20, 4-12 Home

Caitlin Clark has career-high 31 points, 12 assists as Fever beat Sky 100-81 despite Reese record

Caitlin Clark knocked to court on flagrant foul by Diamond DeShields

Clark shot 8 for 14, including 5 for 9 from 3-point range, in her 11th double-double. She is the only player to ever have three games of at least 25 points and 10 rebounds in a season.

On the other side, Reese had 10 points and 11 rebounds, breaking a tie with Tina Charles for rookie double-doubles with 23 and passing Sylvia Fowles for the Chicago season record. Reese got the record with 1:32 to play, long after Clark and the other Indiana starters left the game. She also has a rookie record 399 rebounds.

Clark may have slammed the door on the much-hyped Rookie of the Year race as the Fever (16-16) beat the Sky (11-20) for the third time in four matchups, solidifying their probable playoff berth while Chicago is barely hanging on to the last spot as the season winds down.

The the first matchups were decided by a total of 10 points with a pair of one-point wins for each team while this one became a blowout. Indiana had a season-high for points and Chicago allowed a season high.

The game drew a sellout crowd of 9,445 to Wintrust Arena on Barbie Night — a nod to Reese's college nickname at LSU, Bayou Barbie. The crowd included NBA Hall-of-Famer Shaquille O'Neal, as well as Sue Bird — who had her own Barbie doll back in her Seattle Storm playing days — and soccer star Megan Rapinoe.

Kelsey Mitchell added 23 points on 9-of-13 shooting, her sixth-straight game of at least 20 points, for the Fever, who are 5-1 since the Olympic break. NaLyssa Smith added 14 points and Lexie Hull had 11.

“I think we just understand each other a lot better,” Clark said of the current stretch. “Having the chemistry and having the time to play with one another you just build confidence. I think you’re seeing that. ... I’m proud of this group. We’re been sharing the ball, we’re taking good shots and that’s helping our transition game and it helps us on defense, too.”

The Fever were outrebounded 42-31 but had 28 points in the paint and shot 48.5% with 26 assists on 32 baskets.

Michaela Onyenwere scored 20 points to lead Chicago, which is 1-5 since the Olympic break. Lindsay Allen had 19 and Rachel Banham 14. The Sky were without Chennedy Carter (17.2 points a game), who missed her second-straight game because of health and safety protocols.

With Allen scoring scoring eight quick points, Chicago scored 11-straight and turned that into a 15-1 run to open a 21-9 lead. But Indiana closed the first quarter on a 12-2 run of its own to trail 26-23. The Sky had four of their season-high nine 3-pointers in the first quarter

“Minus the first six minutes of the game, I thought we were really good. We played sound defense,” Clark said. “I’m just proud of this group. I thought we battled and we didn’t let it get close at the end and that was kind of the problem last time we were here. We let them come back, we know they’re a really good fourth-quarter team, but we battled and figured it out.”

Clark then opened the second quarter with a pair of 3-pointers to put the Fever up. Ultimately their run was 34-12, good for a 10-point lead on Mitchell's 3-pointer. Chicago clawed back to 47-41 at the break, pending a Reese free throw to open the second half as the result of a technical on Aliyah Boston, upset at a no-call, as the half ended.

She made the free throw and it was a five-point game entering the second half.

The Fever got the lead to 11 early in the third quarter but the Sky stayed close until Damiris Dantas hit a 3-pointer and Hull made two free throws after a hustle-play offensive rebound as time expired. It was 76-64 heading into the fourth quarter as Smith had 11 points in the third.

The lead reached 27 before Chicago closed with a 10-2 run.

Regular Season Series

IND wins series 3-1

Recent Plays

4th 0.0 End of Game 100 - 81
4th 0.0 End of the 4th Quarter 100 - 81
4th 9.1 Damiris Dantas defensive rebound 100 - 81
4th 12.2 Angel Reese misses free throw 2 of 2 100 - 81
4th 12.2 Sky offensive team rebound 100 - 81

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/wnba/500/ind.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originIND https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/wnba/500/chi.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originCHI
32-66 FG 29-72
48.5 Field Goal % 40.3
13-29 3PT 9-25
44.8 Three Point % 36.0
23-29 FT 14-21
79.3 Free Throw % 66.7
31 Rebounds 42
5 Offensive Rebounds 13
26 Defensive Rebounds 29
26 Assists 24
9 Steals 6
5 Blocks 1
11 Turnovers 13
0 Team Turnovers 2
11 Total Turnovers 15
1 Technical Fouls 1
1 Total Technical Fouls 1
0 Flagrant Fouls 2
5 Points Conceded Off Turnovers 25
17 Fast Break Points 10
28 Points in Paint 30
22 Fouls 21
27 Largest Lead 13

Game Information

Wintrust Arena

Location: Chicago, IL
Attendance: 9,445 · Capacity:

2023-24 Eastern Conference Standings

TEAM W L PCT GB STRK
New York - 8 L1 0.8 32
Connecticut 4 12 W1 0.7 28
Indiana 12 20 L1 0.5 20
Atlanta 17 25 W3 0.375 15
Washington 18 26 W1 0.35 14
Chicago 19 27 L5 0.325 13
Full Standings

WNBA News

WNBA players opt out of CBA: Salaries, long-term benefits among focus

WNBA players opt out of CBA: Salaries, long-term benefits among focus

On the heels of a landmark season, WNBA players are expected to focus on salaries and long-term benefits such as pensions in their negotiations.

Sources: Nike reaches a 12-year extension with NBA, WNBA

Sources: Nike reaches a 12-year extension with NBA, WNBA

Nike has reached a 12-year contract extension agreement with the NBA and WNBA to continue to be the official global outfitter for the professional basketball leagues, sources told ESPN on Monday, a pact that includes a marketing and content partnership.

Could the WNBA be headed toward a work stoppage?

Could the WNBA be headed toward a work stoppage?

Chiney Ogwumike outlines the key issues at the center of the WNBPA's decision to opt out of the current CBA.

WNBA players opt out of CBA, face potential work stoppage

WNBA players opt out of CBA, face potential work stoppage

WNBA players have opted out of their current collective bargaining agreement and face the prospect of a work stoppage if they don't negotiate a new deal with the league by the end of the 2025 season.

Stephen A. blasts Lynx coach for complaining about officials

Stephen A. blasts Lynx coach for complaining about officials

Stephen A. Smith is not a fan of Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve complaining about the officials costing her team a title.