Indiana
New York Liberty decimate Indiana Fever, win 104-68
The Indiana Fever have not had it easy to start the season. Sunday night’s matchup with the New York Liberty marked their 11th game in 20 days, the previous ten giving them a 2-8 record and a whole, whole lot of scrutiny and media attention, much of it directed toward a player you may have heard of: Caitlin Clark.
Sunday night even marked a back-to-back for the Fever, 24 hours after securing their second win of the season, a game that was overshadowed by the reaction to a hard foul by Chennedy Carter on Clark.
The WNBA has retroactively assessed Chennedy Carter a flagrant 1 foul for her contact on Caitlin Clark
Carter was originally only given a foul away from the ball pic.twitter.com/TdC5BnobaV
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) June 2, 2024
Everything about their season — injuries, their subpar pay, the media circus around Clark and its inability to prevent itself from turning into said circus — has been exhausting.
But before they could enjoy four precious off days before their next game on Friday evening, they had to face the Libs at the Barclays Center. And the WNBA is not a league that prizes sympathy.
New York took the lead four seconds into the game after Jonquel Jones directed the opening tip-off to Breanna Stewart in the front-court, igniting a one-woman fast-break. That was it. With 39 minutes and 56 seconds of game to play, the Liberty scored the game-winning bucket, refusing to let the score approach even.
Sandy Brondello’s team had taken early double-digit leads in their last two victories as well, but unlike those games, the Libs didn’t take their foot off the gas pedal in quarters 2 and 3. Indiana’s Kelsey Mitchell and NaLyssa Smith, whose respective seasons have been choppy thus far, combined for 38 points and made some nice plays to cut their deficit from 21 points to 14, but their efforts were ultimately a speed-bump.
The Liberty were completely locked in on defense, and held Caitlin Clark to just three points, five assists, and three turnovers on 1-of-10 shooting. They switched pick-and-rolls, trapped them, hedged them, and everything in between for 40 minutes, with Jones executing whatever was asked of her…
Liberty are locked in with their PnR D right now after It being an issue the last couple games. Able to mix up coverages on the fly.
1: Betnijah directs a scram-switch after the initial action, TO.
2: Then an aggressive hedge forces a rushed pick-up from CC: pic.twitter.com/wuIGmbyvnP— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) June 2, 2024
Jones posted a monster 18/13/4/2/1 stat-line, but was merely the centerpiece of a defense that got contributions from everybody wearing sea foam. Betnijah Laney-Hamilton took the Clark assignment and aced it, while getting help from a flurry of limbs every time the ball entered the paint…
“I think it’s our job to help B out,” explained Jones. “She has a tough responsibility every night to guard the best perimeter players, and she does a great job of that. Teams are definitely going to try to do what they can to get her away from those players, to make the game a little bit easier for them … as much as she’s doing a great job, we have to make sure that we’re backing her up.”
New York recorded more blocks and steals than Indiana, but the turnovers were even at 13 apiece, and there was hardly a difference in transition offense. But Indiana just couldn’t get clean looks in the half-court while the Liberty stumbled into them by accident, ending the game shooting 57.6% from the floor to Indiana’s 37%,
Laney-Hamilton led the way with 20 points on a hyper-efficient 7-of-9 performance, while Sabrina Ionescu added 16/6/6 (though her turnover problems continued with four) and Stewart contributed a calm 13/6/5 on 5-of-11 shooting. The only starter who didn’t crack double-digits was Courtney Vandersloot, who returned after a one-game absence with back tightness, and she still put up nine points and seven assists on 4-of-4 shooting.
Nobody had more than 11 shot attempts, and yet, the Liberty recorded 30 assists on their 38 made baskets, passing up good looks at the rim for great ones…
Brondello described the team’s offensive philosophy after the game: “How do we get the best looks every single time? When we’re sharing it and playing selfless like that, that’s beautiful basketball. It’s fun to watch, it’s fun to play. But then, just making sure we have good inside-outside attack. I think that’s critical for us. We established B, we established JJ early in the game and that kind of opens up the outside.”
Their domination on Sunday wasn’t about any one player, and even the bench turned in their best performance of the season to date. They combined for 28 points — a season-high — despite Nyara Sabally’s absence with a back injury.
“I thought we had great production from the bench,” said Brondello. “We created for each other, I thought we played poised and we got two feet in the paint, we got some open looks near the end, too. It was fun to watch them play that way, and we’re getting there.”
Without Sabally to rely on, the Libs turned to Kennedy Burke in an extended role, and she delivered: ten points on 2-of-2 from three, in addition to three steals and three blocks.
“I felt like today, I had I had more time on the court, so I was able to get in the flow of everything,” said Burke of her performance.”
Along with Leonie Fiebich and Kayla Thornton, she was part of a trio of wings off the bench that kept the Liberty’s 5-out spacing principles flowing while bringing the length and defensive versatility the team envisioned in the preseason.
Burke credited the group’s success to “the trust that we have with each other. There were some lapses where it was a miscommunication, but I feel like throughout the season, it’s gonna get better, it’s gonna get stronger. We just got to keep building off each other and trusting each other.”
No, the Fever were not the most fearsome opponent, especially not on the second half of a back-to-back. But if the Liberty can keep building off this type of performance and indeed get stronger, as Burke predicts, the whole league has to watch out.
After two grind-it-out wins that had the Liberty talking about winning ugly, their Sunday night beatdown of the Fever was a two-hour celebration in front of a sold-out Barclays Center that opened up the entire second deck for Clark’s second trip to NYC.
And, if nothing else, it was a reminder to the 17,401 fans in attendance that New York can still put teams in the dirt.
Final score: New York Liberty 104, Indiana Fever 68
Commissioner’s Cup begins with a bang
Sunday marked the first day of Commissioner’s Cup play for the Liberty, who now sit in a tie with the still-undefeated Connecticut Sun in the Eastern Conference Cup standings.
As a reminder, each team will play the other five teams in its conference once. The team in each conference with the best record in those five games (with point differential as a tie-break) will advance to the championship game on June 25.
New York is the defending Cup champion after their win over the Las Vegas Aces last season, in which they took home the $500,000 prize pool. This season, they will be playing for Women Creating Change, an organization that would receive more money from the W based on how well the Libs do.
Next Up
The New York Liberty begin a three-game road trip on Tuesday, seeking revenge against the Chicago Sky, who handed them their first loss of the season on May 23. Tip-off is scheduled for 8:00 p.m. ET from the Windy City.
Indiana
Man dies after near east side apartment shooting
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — A man is dead after a shooting Thursday night on Indy’s near east side, police say.
According to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, just after 8 p.m., officers were called to the 2000 block of East Washington Street on a report of a person shot.
When officers arrived, they found an adult male inside an apartment with injuries consistent with gunshot wounds.
Indianapolis Emergency Medical Services transported the man to a hospital in critical condition, where died shortly after arriving.
Homicide detectives responded to the scene to begin the investigation.
Crime Resources
Indiana
Braun asks regulators to reconsider $71 million AES rate increase
Gov. Mike Braun asked state regulators to reconsider their decision to greenlight a $71 million rate increase for AES Indiana, doubling down on his condemnation of a move that could leave Indianapolis residents with higher electrical bills for years.
Braun wrote in a June 18 news release that he had asked Indiana Utility Counselor Abby Gray, who heads the office representing ratepayers in proceedings before the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission, to petition for a rehearing of the AES rate case.
Gray indicated in the release that her office would submit the petition shortly. No petition had been posted on the IURC’s online docket as of this story’s publication.
The rate increase, which was approved by the IURC on June 17, was substantially less than the $192 million increase that AES initially requested. It was also less than the amount proposed in a settlement last October between AES and major electricity consumers.
But the Office of Utility Consumer Counselor, which Gray leads, came out strongly against any increase to AES’s base rates. In September, the OUCC called for a $21 million reduction instead.
As the Republican Party grapples with rising discontent over affordability, Braun has used opposition to rising utility rates to telegraph that he’s committed to keeping costs down for Indiana residents. He signed a law in February that allows the state to make rate-setting decisions that reward or penalize utilities based on metrics including affordability.
In March, he told reporters that he would take on Indiana’s five investor-owned utilities, describing himself as the “new sheriff in town.”
And after the IURC voted 3-1 to approve the AES rate increase, he wrote in a post to X that he was “deeply disappointed.”
Braun wrote in the June 18 news release that he had appointed Gray, a longtime OUCC lawyer and judge, to her current post because he knew she “would help me fight for Hoosiers.”
According to AES’s estimates, the rate increase will cost households an additional $5 per month for every 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity they use, beginning in July. A second hike will take effect in January.
Tilly Robinson is a Pulliam fellow for the Indianapolis Star. She can be reached at tilly.robinson@indystar.com.
Indiana
College sports wants Congress’ help. Why Indiana Sen. Todd Young voted against bill
The Protect College Sports Act, legislation meant to introduce and codify sweeping reforms related to college athletics, passed out of the Senate Commerce Committee on Thursday morning.
It now heads to the Senate floor.
The bill passed out of committee by a 19-9 vote. Indiana Republican Sen. Todd Young voted no, his decision reflecting Big Ten concerns over the bill.
A spokesman for Sen. Young told IndyStar, “Senator Young hopes that additional changes can be made to the bill to address concerns raised by the Big Ten.”
Co-sponsored by Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), the Protect College Sports Act represents Congress’ most substantial success so far in a yearslong effort to bring legislative reform to college athletics. Since before the COVID-19 pandemic, leaders in college sports — including the NCAA, member conferences and schools, and other major players — have lobbied for national solutions to what have become state and regional problems.
Several pieces of legislation have been introduced across the last several years, only to fizzle long before reaching the floor of either chamber. The SCORE Act, introduced last year in the House of Representatives, gained some traction and passed out of committee, but was never brought to the floor.
Which makes Thursday’s news meaningful. Moving the Protect College Sports Act to the Senate floor, while not a guarantee of any outcome, potentially takes the bill past a threshold no other such piece of reformative legislation has yet been able to cross.
Cruz told Yahoo! Sports’ Ross Dellenger on Thursday that Cruz believes Sen. Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) is committed to introducing the bill to the Senate floor soon.
The bill provides a legal framework for a host of potential reforms and protections for college sports. It grants limited antitrust protection to the NCAA, places limits on certain things including potential conference realignment, builds safeguards meant to protect non-revenue and Olympic sports, addresses potential broadcast rights reforms, and more.
It enjoys significant backing, and not just among leaders in college sports. This week, the NFL, its players’ association, the National Basketball Players Association and Major League Baseball all voiced their support for the bill.
Two key constituencies not in lockstep on the bill voiced their own concerns Thursday.
In a joint statement issued just after 10 a.m. Thursday, the Big Ten and SEC — far and away the two most powerful conferences and arguably two greatest power centers, full stop, in college athletics — suggested they still hold significant reservations over the bill.
“From the outset, we identified a set of essential revisions to the PCSA necessary for the long-term sustainability of college athletics,” the statement read. “We have worked with both majority and minority staff to advance those revisions, which focus on better supporting student-athletes and stabilizing the college sports environment. We continue to believe revisions are needed to secure our support for the bill.
“Despite our sustained engagement and good faith efforts, these critical revisions have not been accepted.”
The statement went on to note the “several Commerce Committee members that share our concerns and support these recommendations.”
Young is one of several members of the committee representing a Big Ten state, including one of three Republicans. He is the only Republican member of the committee whose state contains multiple schools in the conference.
Allowing for those reservations, Thursday’s news is still significant. It marks the first time a bipartisan bill on the subject has reached this point in the Senate and, should it be brought to the floor, it would be the first such legislation to reach that stage, in either chamber.
The bill could be brought to the Senate floor as early as July, though that timeline remains fluid.
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