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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Sport
Bryan Armen Graham

It won’t be easy for Caitlin Clark in the WNBA, sports’ most unmerciful league

Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever looks on during a preseason game against the Dallas Wings on Friday in Arlington, Texas.
Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever looks on during a preseason game against the Dallas Wings on Friday in Arlington, Texas. Photograph: Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

From the moment Caitlin Clark was tapped by the Indiana Fever with the first overall pick in last month’s WNBA draft, the buzz surrounding the once-in-a-generation player from the American heartland has only redoubled.

The 22-year-old from West Des Moines, who broke Pete Maravich’s 54-year-old record to become the all-time leading scorer in major college basketball history earlier this year, is the bandleader of a sensational WNBA rookie class that has drawn millions of new fans to the women’s game in recent months – and generated an unprecedented sense of excitement as the league’s 28th season tips off on Tuesday night.

Signposts of the so-called Caitlin Clark Effect are everywhere you look. Her replica No 22 jersey sold out on the league’s official store within an hour of her being drafted. StubHub announced its sales for WNBA games were up 93% compared with last season. Last week the Dallas Wings and Atlanta Dream confirmed they’d sold out their season-ticket packages after the vaunted Las Vegas Aces did the same in March. When the WNBA’s streaming app failed to carry a preseason contest on Friday that featured the debuts of Chicago’s Angel Reese and Kamilla Cardoso, a fan’s cellphone livestream from the stands racked up over half a million views on the night and more than 2.5m overall in the days since.

And for all of the justifiable hand-wringing over Clark’s humble $76,000 rookie salary, her recently inked $28m endorsement deal with Nike is no small consolation, to say nothing of her previous lucrative pacts with the likes of Gatorade, State Farm, Xfinity and Panini.

Heady times, indeed. But the honeymoon won’t last long. It’s going to be a whole new ballgame for Clark when Indiana open their season against the Connecticut Sun on Tuesday night at Mohegan Sun Arena – and no one seems to know it better than Clark herself.

“The WNBA is so competitive right now,” Clark said last month in Brooklyn after Indiana confirmed America’s worst-kept secret by making her the top pick. “Every single time you step on the floor, it’s going to be a rivalry. I think so many teams are loaded with so much talent. This is the most competitive league in the entire world. Less than 144 spots.”

That’s no exaggeration: a smaller league means talent is more concentrated and pretty much every team is packed with elite talent. While the NBA is composed of 30 teams with up to 15 players allowed on a regular-season roster, the WNBA is currently made up of 12 teams with no more than 12 players apiece – with many clubs not even fielding the maximum due to rigid salary cap constraints. Unlike the NBA’s G League, there’s no developmental circuit where players who miss the cut can fall back and hone their skills, at least not domestically. And while opportunities do exist abroad, many of those spots are taken by established WNBA players supplementing their salaries in the offseason. The war in Ukraine and Brittney Griner’s nine-month incarceration have further complicated matters since few overseas leagues offered better pay than Russia.

It’s wrought a ruthless numbers game that reflects a cutthroat reality. Of the 36 players selected in the 2023 WNBA draft, only 15 appeared on opening-day rosters while barely half (19) have appeared in even one game at any point. Since 2018, more than one-third of all draft picks – 74 of 216 (34.3%) – have yet to play a single minute of a WNBA contest.

“We’ve even seen in recent years first-round picks who weren’t able to stick their rookie year,” ESPN analyst Rebecca Lobo said in a conference call with reporters last month. “The hardest part of this conversation every year is the reality is that second and third-round picks have a really hard time making WNBA rosters. First-round picks that go late have a hard time making WNBA rosters. We talk about a league of 144. It’s not a league of 144. Many of these teams only carry 11 players and maybe by the end of the season they can carry a 12th.”

The encouraging long-term news is the WNBA will, in fact, be expanding. The Bay Area was awarded a franchise in October that will join the league next year, while commissioner Cathy Englebert said on draft night that she believes it will add 14th, 15th and 16th teams by 2028.

High lottery picks like Clark, Reese, Cardoso, the LA Sparks’ Cameron Brink and the Washington Mystics’ Aaliyah Edwards don’t have to worry about making the opening-day roster. But a relative sense of job security won’t make it any easier on Tuesday they get their first taste of live fire on a circuit where veterans have been famously unsparing on newcomers. Look no further than Diana Taurasi, the 42-year-old floor general still operating at an elite level entering her 20th season with the Phoenix Mercury. Asked last month what Clark has in store for her when the year begins, Taurasi was typically to the point.

“Reality is coming,” Taurasi said. “There’s levels to this thing. We all went through it. That happens on the NBA side, and you’re going to see it on this side. You look superhuman playing against 18-year-olds, but you’re going to come play with some grown women that have been playing professional basketball for a long time.”

“Not saying that it’s not going to translate, because when you’re great at what you do, you’re just going to get better, but there is going to be a transition period when you have to give some grace as a rookie.”

ESPN analyst Andraya Carter, who thinks Clark’s range, shot-making and vision will translate immediately to the professional level, was a bit more tactful when asked to assess the challenges that the 6ft point guard will face.

“​​The physicality of going against grown women is going to be tough,” Carter said. “The hits are going to be a little bit harder, the checks are going to be harder. The defense is going to be more physical, and the players will be faster. Just getting everybody that goes from college to the next level, talks about the speed of the game. Everything is going to be faster. Everything is going to be tougher.”

For all the column-inches that have been devoted to whether this rookie class will be able to carry over the momentum from a transformative college basketball season that re-wrote US television viewership records to the WNBA, none of it will matter when the rubber hits the road on Tuesday night. From there performance overtakes potential as the thing that matters most.

“I certainly know there’s pressure there,” Clark said last month. “That’s been my entire career.”

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