Indiana
Obituary for Janice Carol Wynn Cox Smithers Fugate at Madison Chapel


Indiana
Pacers News: Insider Projects All-NBA Season for Indiana Star

With two-time All-NBA point guard Tyrese Haliburton out for the entirety of the 2025-26 season, another Indiana Pacers star is expected to rise to All-NBA level in his stead,
More news: 2 Pacers Stars on Cusp of All-Star Breakouts in 2025-26
Frank Urbina of HoopsHype ranks Siakam as the second-best power forward in the league heading into the 2025-26 season. The 6-foot-9 vet is behind only nine-time All-NBA Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, and ahead of Orlando Magic All-Star Paolo Banchero (No. 3), Cleveland Cavaliers Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley (No. 4), and Dallas Mavericks All-Star Anthony Davis.
Last year, on a deep Finals-bound Pacers club, Siakam averaged 20.2 points on 51.9 percent field goal shooting and 38.9 3-point shooting, 6.9 boards, and 3.4 assists.
“Some may call this a hot take, having veteran swingman Pascal Siakam ranked as the second-best power forward in the NBA, three spots ahead of Davis, but after the Indiana Pacers’ run to the Finals, which Siakam played a vital role in, can you blame us?” Urbina writes.
At 31, Siakam emerged as the second-best player on a Finals squad last season. In 2018-19, he was the third-best player on the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors. As a three-time All-Star and two-time All-NBA honoree, Siakam is now on the cusp of potential future Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame consideration. Should he string together another few seasons around this level, he could make the grade.
“Siakam is a dynamic attacker, thanks to his quickness, size, spin move, and ball-handling at 6-foot-8, playing like an attacking power forward more than a play finisher,” Urbina opines.
More news: Pacers’ Tyrese Haliburton Responds to ‘Haliban’ Nickname
The 6-foot-8 vet enjoyed a stellar playoff run, notching averages relatively in line with his regular season output en route to the Finals. He averaged 20.5 points on 51.3 percent shooting from the floor and 42.7 percent shooting from deep, 6.3 boards, 3.4 dimes and 1.2 swipes a night.
Urbina predicts that Siakam should soak up some of Haliburton’s minutes and touches in his absence.
“Clearly, we expect a return to the All-NBA strata this season for Siakam,” Urbina predicts. A lot of that could hinge on how well the Pacers do sans Haliburton or Myles Turner.
For more news and notes on the Indiana Pacers, visit Indiana Pacers on SI.
Indiana
How Fever overcame 5 season-ending injuries to make playoffs: ‘We all we got, we all we need’
Fever coach Stephanie White explains decision to shut Caitlin Clark down for season
Fever coach Stephanie White on how they came to the conclusion to shut Caitlin Clark down for the season and the emotions Clark felt on that decision.
BALTIMORE — When Caitlin Clark got injured, it changed the scope of this Indiana Fever team.
Clark, the 2024 Rookie of the Year and first-team All-WNBA selection, has been the engine that drives the Fever. She smashed multiple league-wide records in her first season, including the WNBA assist record, on the way to leading the Fever to their first postseason appearance in seven years.
She is the Fever’s star, on the court and off. She wills her team to wins and brings in fans from across the world. But she was limited to 13 games this year because of various injuries, including four separate muscle injuries and a bone bruise in her left ankle.
At first, it changed what people thought of the Fever: could they be successful without Clark? Is the season a wash without her?
With or without Clark on the court, the Fever were determined to have a successful season. So, Kelsey Mitchell borrowed a mantra to bring to her team: “We all we got, we all we need.”
“When CC got hurt, I felt like it was deflating,” Mitchell said on Friday night. “It was hard for people to kind of see us and see our energy for what we brought to the table as a team. Hats off to CC for being a great teammate and having to go through so much with injury, but the ‘all we got, all we need’ is a staple to who we trying to be as a team and who we want our culture to be.”
And that mantra only became more relevant as the season went on.
Clark had multiple injuries throughout the season that limited her availability, but the right groin injury that ultimately ended her season came on July 15. A few weeks later, Clark suffered a bone bruise in her left ankle while doing an individual workout on Aug. 7.
That same night, Aari McDonald and Sydney Colson — Indiana’s two backup point guards — suffered season-ending injuries against Phoenix. Ten days after that, Sophie Cunningham tore her MCL and was ruled out for the season. On Aug. 22, Chloe Bibby hurt her knee during pregame warmups and was eventually ruled out for the season too.
It was an unprecedented amount of adversity, having five season-ending injuries over the course of five weeks. But Indiana knew its season wasn’t over. It had to press on.
“I think just being in this locker room, we never doubt ourselves on what we’re capable of, no matter what happens,” Aliyah Boston said Sunday. “I think the entire staff, from the head down, just made great decisions when people went down on who to bring in, the type of people to bring in, and we never doubted ourselves. We never doubted that we could be in the playoffs.”
The Fever had to bring on multiple players on one or two days’ notice. Odyssey Sims joined the Fever on Aug. 10, getting one practice before playing in a game for the first time. Shey Peddy, who joined the team on Aug. 20, had two practices before playing her first game. Aerial Powers signed with the team on Aug. 23, getting just a morning shootaround before checking in for the first time.
All three of those players have become key rotational players for the Fever, and Sims is Indiana’s starting point guard. And that “We all we got, we all we need” mantra became an energizer for the Fever, especially for the players who joined midseason.
“Coming in, the first thing that really made me like, woah, was Kelsey goes during guard shootaround, ‘We all we got, we all we need,’” Powers said. “And right then and there I was like, ‘Yep, I felt it already.’ Coming in and feeling the grit, the grind that the team has, top to bottom, and being able to insert myself, it’s been amazing.”
It showed them, at the base level, how Indiana was never going to give up even in a time of unprecedented hardship. The Fever built their culture to fight, no matter who is or isn’t on the court.
“We can’t help the ones that aren’t here, which is unfortunate, but we can help the ones who are, and be present about that and not disrespect the game,” Mitchell said. “I would like to think that CC, Aari, Syd would want to play and be in our shoes. So I think the ‘We all we got, we all we need’ is a respect thing, but to put it in the air that we all we got and we all we need, because that’s how it is, and that’s how it’s always been.”
That culture, that mantra culminated in a playoff berth for Indiana. The Fever will be no lower than the No. 7 seed in the playoffs, and could move up to six if they beat the Lynx on Tuesday and Golden State loses each of its final two games.
Indiana’s season hasn’t been what anyone expected, from the coaching staff, to the players, to the fans. But it still shows an upward trajectory for the Fever, who have now made the playoffs for two straight seasons after missing it for seven straight from 2017-23.
It’s a change in culture for Indiana, a will to fight even when it seems like all hope is lost. The Fever will bring four players on hardship waivers into the playoffs, but they’re not counting themselves out of anything.
“When you can go through and grow through these types of experiences, it lays a foundation for championship culture and championship mindset,” Fever coach Steph White said. “That’s our ultimate goal, to be able to take it one day at a time, to be able to put ourselves in a position to be in the playoffs, and now a mindset of finishing the regular season and then make a noise in the playoffs.”
Indiana’s playoff opponent hasn’t yet been determined. The Fever have one more regular season game against the Lynx on Tuesday, then will tip off the playoffs on the road on Sept. 14.
Get IndyStar’s Indiana Fever and Caitlin Clark coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Caitlin Clark Fever newsletter.
Indiana
Indiana Fever vs. Golden State Valkyries: TV channel, time, how to watch

WNBA playoff stakes rise for Fever, Sparks, Valkyries, and Mystics
USAT’s Meghan Hall breaks down why she believes these WNBA teams missing the playoffs will be a disappointment to fans.
Sports Seriously
The Indiana Fever and Golden State Valkyries have both faced devastating injuries this season, but their playoff hopes remain alive down the final stretch of the season.
The Fever (21-18) will travel to the Bay Area to face off against the Valkyries (19-18) on Sunday for the third and final time this regular season and the matchup will have major postseason implications for both squads.
Four teams have already punched their tickets to the 2025 WNBA Playoffs — the Minnesota Lynx, Las Vegas Aces, Atlanta Dream and Phoenix Mercury — leaving the final four spots up for grabs. Only three games separate sixth place from ninth place, making every game a must-win for the Fever and Valkyries.
The Fever notched a crucial 76-75 victory Friday against the Los Angeles Sparks by way of Odyssey Sims’ go-ahead floating jumper with 13 seconds remaining. Indiana currently sits in sixth place in the WNBA standings, only one game ahead of the Valkyries, who currently hold the eighth and final spot in the playoffs.
Indiana is looking to avoid a regular-season sweep by Golden State on Sunday. The Valkyries are 2-0 against the Fever this season, defeating the Fever 88-77 at Chase Center on June 19 and 80-61 on July 9 in Indianapolis. (Caitlin Clark played in both those matchups, but was ruled out Sunday with a right groin injury.) If the Fever and Valkyries were to finish with the same record, Golden State would hold the tiebreaker because of its head-to-head advantage.
The Fever are looking to make the postseason in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2015-16, while the Valkyries are vying to become the first expansion team to make the playoffs in its inaugural season.
Here’s what you need to know about Sunday’s matchup between the Fever and Valkyries:
The Golden State Valkyries will host the Indiana Fever at 8:30 p.m. ET (5:30 p.m. PT) on Sunday, Aug. 31, at the Chase Center in San Francisco. The game will be broadcast nationally on NBA TV.
How to watch Indiana Fever vs. Golden State Valkyries: TV, stream
- Time: 8:30 p.m. ET (5:30 p.m. PT)
- Location: Chase Center (San Francisco)
- TV channel: NBA TV
- Streaming: Fubo (free trial to new subscribers)
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