Home US SportsWNBA If WNBA wants a true Caitlin Clark-Angel Reese rivalry, the Sky must grow quickly

If WNBA wants a true Caitlin Clark-Angel Reese rivalry, the Sky must grow quickly

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INDIANAPOLIS — Angel Reese stepped to the free-throw line Saturday as the boo birds rained down their chorus on her at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. The Chicago Sky forward had just been on the other end of a flagrant foul committed by Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, and the sellout crowd filled with Fever fans let Reese have it. The boos erupted into cheers when Reese missed the first attempt off the back iron, and they quieted only a little when she sank the second.

In that moment, at the 4:38 mark of the third quarter, the WNBA’s marquee season opener felt like a rivalry. But by the final buzzer, it was clear that this matchup is not. At least, not yet. The Fever cruised to a 93-58 victory, their fourth win over the Sky in five tries across the last two years. The back-and-forth Clark and Reese exchanged in college — when Reese’s LSU knocked off Clark’s Iowa in the 2023 national championship, followed by Clark ending Reese’s LSU career the next season in the Elite Eight — has not manifested between their teams in the WNBA.

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Despite the Fever having the Sky’s number, that’s done little to quell the competitive fire between each team’s young star. There’s no love lost between Reese and Clark, evidenced by the physicality they’ve shown each other as they’ve transitioned to the pro ranks. Last year, Reese committed a flagrant foul on Clark by whacking her on the head as Clark went up for a layup. This year, Clark committed a flagrant foul on Reese by swiping down on Reese’s arm and pushing her in the back as she tried to shoot near the rim.

“Basketball play,” Reese said matter-of-factly after the game. “Refs got it right. Move on.”

The Sky tried to turn the page, cutting the Fever’s lead to 11 points after Reese’s flagrant free throw and Courtney Vandersloot’s subsequent layup on the next possession, but as the game wore on, Chicago wore down. The result was a lopsided contest in which the Fever looked like a title contender and the Sky looked out of sorts.

“They’re loaded top to bottom. They got a great bench as well,” first-year Sky coach Tyler Marsh said of the Fever. “Yeah, we got our work cut out for us, but we’re up for the challenge. We’re not backing down from anything.”

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