Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark a
near-unanimous choice as WNBA's Rookie of the Year
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[October 04, 2024]
NEW YORK (AP) — Caitlin Clark has been named the WNBA Rookie
of the Year in a near-unanimous vote, giving the Indiana Fever
back-to-back winners after Aliyah Boston won the honor last season.
A national panel of sportswriters and sportscasters gave Clark 66 of
67 votes in balloting released Thursday. Chicago Sky forward Angel
Reese received the other.
“I am incredibly honored to be named Rookie of the Year, but more
than that, I am grateful to everyone that supported me throughout
this past season -- my family and friends, my teammates, the Fever
organization and everyone that cheered us on all season. I am so
proud of what we accomplished and so excited for what the future
holds,” Clark said in a statement.
Clark, the No. 1 overall pick from Iowa, averaged 19.2 points and a
league-best 8.4 assists per game while helping the WNBA set
attendance records and garner mainstream attention. She struggled a
bit early in the season, but found her groove and was an All-Star
starter. The unanimous AP Rookie of the Year led the Fever to the
playoffs for the first time since 2016 and a 20-20 record after a
1-8 start.
“I’m a tough grader. I feel like I had a solid year,” Clark said
after the Fever were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs.
“For me, the fun part is like I feel like I’m just scratching the
surface and I’m the one that’s nit picking every single thing I do.
I know I want to help this franchise. ... I know there’s a lot of
room for me to continue to improve so that’s what excites me the
most. I feel like I continue to get a lot better.”
Clark was not chosen for the U.S. Olympic team — a decision that
disappointed her legions of fans — but she showed in the weeks
afterward that she might have been helpful. The Fever guard averaged
24.7 points and 9.3 assists in her first 10 games after the Olympic
break and led Indiana to an 8-2 record.
Clark was named the Eastern Conference Player of the Month for
August, was Player of the Week three times and Rookie of the Month
four times. She recorded the first two triple-doubles by a rookie in
WNBA history, set a league single-game record with 19 assists and
became the first rookie to have at least 30 points and 10 assists in
a game.
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Connecticut Sun's Marina Mabrey (4) guards against Indiana Fever's
Caitlin Clark (22) during a first-round WNBA basketball playoff game
at Mohegan Sun Arena, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024. (Sarah Gordon/The Day
via AP)
Clark led the league with 122 3-pointers, was
second with 90.6% accuracy from the free-throw line and averaged 5.7
rebounds and 1.3 steals. She set a league single-season record with
337 assists and set rookie records of 769 points and 122
three-pointers made.
Reese averaged 13.6 points and 13.1 rebounds for the Sky.
Off the court, Clark, Reese and their fellow rookies were a ratings
and attendance boon for the WNBA. Six different league television
partners set viewership records this year for its highest viewed
WNBA game. All of those games included the Fever.
Indiana led the league in attendance both at home and on the road.
The Fever averaged 17,036 at home and more than 15,000 on the road.
Four teams moved home games to bigger arenas when Indiana came to
town to accommodate more fans.
Despite Indiana's blowout loss to Connecticut in Game 1, fans tuned
in as the game averaged 1.8 million viewers, according to ESPN,
making it the WNBA’s most watched playoff game since the 2000
Finals. It was the most watched playoff game on ESPN ever despite
going up against the NFL.
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