The pick came as little surprise after the 22
year-old toppled the all-time NCAA scoring record and sent TV
ratings soaring during the March Madness tournament in her final
college season.
"I'm just very lucky to be in this moment and all these
opportunities and these things are once in a lifetime," said
Clark.
Fans swarmed outside the Brooklyn Academy of Music and a
sold-out crowd cheered wildly as Commissioner Cathy Engelbert
announced Clark's selection.
Stanford's fearsome shot-blocker Cameron Brink went second to
the Los Angeles Sparks, and the Chicago Sky took South
Carolina's Brazilian phenom Kamilla Cardoso third.
More than 18 million tuned in to watch South Carolina thwart
Iowa in the collegiate finale last week. Clark will be one of
the biggest attractions in the upcoming WNBA season, and the
ticket resale market has surged in anticipation of her arrival.
"We are witnessing a transformational moment in sports that we
may not experience for generations," Engelbert told reporters
ahead of the draft on Monday night. "We are ready for this
moment."
Clark joins last year's first overall draft pick and unanimous
Rookie of the Year, Aliyah Boston, at an ailing Indiana Fever
franchise that has not enjoyed a winning season since 2015.
"I am confident she will have an immediate impact on our team
and the league," Fever General Manager Lin Dunn said in a
statement. "Any time you can add two consecutive No. 1 draft
selections, it creates enormous interest and visibility."
Clark said she would lean on Boston and some of the team's more
senior members as she navigates a new chapter in her career.
"I'm 22 years old, and, I don't have all the answers in the
world," Clark told reporters. "This is something new to me. This
is a new challenge. And that's something I'm excited for."
The WNBA regular season begins on May 14.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Sonali Paul
and Tom Hogue)
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