Sports
How Caitlin Clark’s rookie season has been ‘the perfect fuel on a fire’ for a new WNBA era
Nearly 20 years ago, Conrad Piccirillo attended his first Indiana Fever game. The WNBA franchise was just five years into its existence and on the brink of its best year to date, but he admittedly was not there for the basketball. His daughters, 10-year-old Caitlyn and 11-year-old Claire, were members of the Fever Inferno’s youth dance team, and he was there to cheer them on during their performances.
Eventually, his daughters aged out of the dance troupe, but by that point, Piccirillo was hooked. He bought six season tickets and invited friends, reveling in the Fever’s 2012 WNBA championship. Yet, when the Fever hit hard times with consistent losing records for nearly a decade, Piccirillo found it harder to convince friends to join him at Fever games in his free courtside seats.
Flash forward to 2024 and he hasn’t had that problem again thanks to Caitlin Clark. His cohort is part of the legion of fans who have made Fever games the hottest ticket in the WNBA. He attended all but one game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse this season, soaking in the energy and environment as he watched waves of fans fall in love with the Fever and the WNBA the same way he did.
“I think she’s the perfect fuel on a fire that had been really growing,” Piccirillo said about Clark.
Clark’s rookie season marks a new era not only for the Fever franchise, but also the city of Indianapolis, the state and the WNBA. Clark was a spectacle at Iowa unlike anyone women’s college basketball has ever seen with her logo 3s and competitive fire. The WNBA and the Fever — who had the No. 1 draft pick — hoped her dazzle and appeal would carry over to provide a similar spark for the league.
This was a blast! Best fans in @WNBA – @GainbridgeFH – FEVER NATION is alive & well! @IndianaFever pic.twitter.com/LYrCfGHqCh
— Eddie White (@eddiewhite3) September 16, 2024
As the playoffs began Sunday — even with an opening loss by the Fever at Connecticut — the payoff of banking on Clark is evident on TV, in the stands and in the marketplace. Before Clark even stepped on the court in a Fever jersey, she surpassed expectations.
Only once in the 2000s had a WNBA game garnered 2.4 million viewers on TV, but on draft night, even more fans tuned in to watch the league commissioner call Clark’s name. Since then, Clark has continued to help the Fever and WNBA smash television records.
Six different league television partners set viewership records this year for its highest viewed WNBA game, and all six included the Fever. ION, which broadcast 43 WNBA games, experienced a 133 percent increase in viewership year over year, and each of its seven broadcasts that topped 1 million viewers included Fever games. Per Yahoo Sports, NBA TV set its own WNBA viewership record eight times this season — each of those a Fever game.
ESPN, a longtime WNBA partner, had its most successful year of broadcasting the league.
The 2024 #WNBA regular season on ESPN platforms was the most-watched EVER! 🎉
🏀 1.2M avg. viewers
🏀 WNBA Countdown: 508K avg. viewers pic.twitter.com/FrnWHOp11h— ESPN PR (@ESPNPR) September 11, 2024
The first regular-season Fever-Sky game — with Clark and rookie rival Angel Reese taking center stage — marked the most-viewed WNBA game in 23 years across any network, with 2.35 million viewers. That record was broken a month later when the WNBA All-Star Game brought in a whopping 3.4 million viewers, making it the third most-watched WNBA game in history.
But it’s at Fever home games where the buzz is palpable.
Attendance in Indianapolis hit a record high — 17,036 per home game to lead the league in attendance for the first time. Fever season ticket sales were already on the uptick, but when Clark announced in February that she was forgoing her fifth season of college eligibility, demand for Fever tickets became unprecedented.
According to Across the Timeline, the Fever hadn’t been in the top half of WNBA average attendance since 2016.
Piccirillo, the longtime Fever season ticket holder, now wears earplugs inside Gainbridge Fieldhouse, and his AppleWatch frequently notifies him during games that the decibels he experiences could be reaching damaging levels. “It is like watching Pacers playoff games — that’s how loud it is,” he said. “In my mind, I think it’s even louder.”
It wasn’t just in Indiana where Clark bumped attendance. Before the season started, four Fever opponents — Las Vegas, Atlanta, Washington and Los Angeles — moved at least one of their home games against Indiana to larger arenas to accommodate more fans.
Tamika Catchings, a Hall of Fame forward who spent her entire 14-year career with the Fever, still lives in Indianapolis. She was excited last season when Indiana, led by 2023 No. 1 pick Aliyah Boston, experienced an eight-win increase. “But last year to this year is insane, how much energy is around,” she said.
She’s noticed big-box stores that never sold Fever gear now displaying merchandise front and center. Fans enter her local tea shop, Tea’s Me Cafe, and ask her about Clark, Boston and Kelsey Mitchell. “(Fans) get excited when they see me because they want to talk about the Fever,” she said. “In (past) years, it might be that they get excited about seeing me, but that’s it. You can tell there’s a genuine energy and interest in: ‘What are your thoughts about the Indiana Fever?’”
Indianapolis comes to life when the Fever play. An executive with the city’s tourism department said hotel and rentals spiked this summer when the Fever played.
During the 2024 women’s NCAA Tournament, Brent Drescher, general manager of the downtown Indianapolis bar The District Tap, said fans began stopping in to watch Iowa women’s basketball, anticipating Clark’s future arrival to town. Fans of the Pacers, who made a run to the NBA’s Eastern Conference finals, often frequented his bar, showing up around 5 p.m. for late tip-offs, Drescher said. Fever fans are even more engaged. “They are coming in as early as 4,” he said.
Jeff Metson, general manager of Taxman CityWay, notices a similar buzz. A brew pub with a beer garden and only four TVs inside, it isn’t a typical sports bar, but because it’s on the same block as the Fever’s arena, it’s become a pregame destination — to the point that he’s often had to double his staff. During Fever home games, he said, the Taxman welcomes as many as 400 patrons compared to about 250 on a typical Friday or Saturday night.
“Not only do we fill up the entire restaurant pregame, but like clockwork, two hours after the game starts we have people starting to walk down the street, right in front of us,” he said. “Unlike the others — Pacers and Colts games — our postgame crowd fills the restaurant again. The other sports don’t do that.”
Jaden Brown and his fiancee had never bought season tickets for any sport before buying them for the Fever this year. They were stunned to see even a small pizza shock packed with fans before the Fever’s first preseason game.
“You just see this flood of Fever, Clark, Iowa jerseys,” Brown said. “It’s like a pregame with strangers. But they’re not strangers because you’re all there supporting the same team.”
However, it’s not just bars and restaurants in the Indy area that have seen the Caitlin Clark Effect up close. Portland’s The Sports Bra — a bar that has created buzz by showing only women’s sports on its TVs since opening in 2022 — is more than 2,000 miles away from Indianapolis and in a city currently without a WNBA team. When the Fever play, owner Jenny Nguyen said, there’s a 56 percent increase in the number of bar bills and a 52 percent increase in revenue.
A framed Clark No. 22 Iowa jersey, next to photos of Serena Williams and Diana Taurasi, hangs on a wall at the bar. But that’s not surprising, considering Clark apparel can be found anywhere.
The laws of supply and demand are evident around Fever games. Fans did not flinch to shell out money despite significant ticket price increases for Fever games.
Heading into the playoffs, the get-in price for the Fever-Sun game as of Saturday was significantly higher on TicketMaster at $89 than the league’s other three Sunday games, which averaged $15 per game. This follows a season-long trend. The five highest average ticket prices this season all featured the Fever.
Hottest WNBA tickets of 2024
| Indiana Fever @ | Average sold price | Date |
|---|---|---|
|
$346 |
June 23 |
|
|
$286 |
Aug. 30 |
|
|
$269 |
Sept. 1 |
|
|
$262 |
July 17 |
|
|
$217 |
Sept. 19 |
Those numbers alone are impressive, but compare them to the same matchups from last season. The average price when the Fever visited the Sky in June 2023 was $45. When Indiana traveled to Washington twice in July 2023, tickets went for $59 on average in July 2023 when the Mystics hosted the Fever, and they sold for $55 when Indiana played at Dallas last September. The hottest ticket for any game last season was $120 for a regular-season game between the Aces and the Dream.
Across the board, WNBA ticket pricing followed suit — jumping from $62 per game in 2023 to $109 per game in 2024 (through mid-September), according to Vivid Seats. But no team experienced quite as drastic a jump as the Fever, whose home game tickets averaged $110 this season, compared to the rest of the W, which averaged $79 per home game.
Despite the higher price point, even more tickets were sold this year.
“The fans in Indiana love basketball, and I’m glad to see them back in the seats, especially for the Fever,” said Briann January, who played the first nine seasons of her career with the Fever and is now an assistant coach with the Sun. “For that team to be recognized and supported the way they should be makes me so happy.”
During the first week of the season, the WNBA said it saw a 236 percent increase year over year in merchandise sales, with jerseys for Clark, Reese and Cameron Brink all in the top five. Through the first two months of the season, four Fever home games set single-game sales records at the arena’s team store, according to the Fever. Total items sold grew 694 percent year over year, and the store’s net sales increased more than 1,000 percent. Jersey sales were up 1,193 percent heading into the All-Star break.
Clark collectibles have been in high demand as well. Her signature Wilson basketball sold out in 40 minutes earlier this month, prompting a restock for the latest drop on Monday. A one-of-a-kind autographed Clark WNBA Draft card — the first showing her in a Fever jersey — sold at auction for $84,000.
The sense something big was coming in Indianapolis was looming for months. Before Clark’s Fever debut, the city hung a 150-foot banner of her on a building near Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Clark’s image seems to be staring across the city.
Now, for the first time in eight years, the Fever are back in the playoffs. Indy’s past greats already can recognize and appreciate her impact. “Playing basketball in Indiana is different, whether it be in Indianapolis or one of the smaller cities, basketball is bred differently,” Indiana Pacers legend Reggie Miller said in an email. “So watching the excitement the Fever have brought to the city and state has been fun to witness.”
A Fever road win over the Sun on Wednesday would guarantee a series-clinching Game 3 in Indianapolis. Catchings predicts a crazed crowd showing up to watch Clark try to lead the Fever to their first semifinals since 2015.
“It’s like Fever basketball and women’s basketball has been rejuvenated,” Catchings said. “Especially here in Indy.”
(Illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; Visual data: John Bradford / The Athletic; Photos: Luke Hales / Getty Images, G Fiume / Getty Images, Brian Spurlock / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Sports
Jessica Pegula’s commitment to hard work every day has turned her into a leader
INDIAN WELLS — Jessica Pegula never needed tennis.
She simply kept showing up for it anyway, through the long and often anonymous slog of the professional tour.
Now 32 and the oldest player in the top 10, Pegula is having her best season start yet.
The fifth-ranked American reached the Australian Open semifinals for the first time in January, falling to eventual champion Elena Rybakina. She followed that by capturing the Dubai 1000-level tournament, just a rung below the majors.
She is 15-2 so far in 2026, tied with Victoria Mboko in match wins and second only to Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina (17-3), who she defeated 6-2, 6-4 in the Dubai final.
Pegula is guaranteed to emerge from this week’s BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells as the top-ranked American, overtaking No. 4 Coco Gauff, if she reaches the final.
Jessica Pegula kisses the Dubai trophy after defeating Elina Svitolina in the finals on Feb. 21.
(Altaf Qadri / Associated Press)
First, she will have to get past No. 12-seed Belinda Bencic of Switzerland, her fourth-round opponent on Wednesday. Bencic has not dropped a set in four previous meetings with Pegula.
“That will be a challenge for me,” said the characteristically even-keeled Pegula after defeating former French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko in the third round on Monday.
A late bloomer, Pegula has taken the long road.
She failed to qualify for Grand Slam main draws in 12 of 14 attempts from 2011 to 2018, and didn’t reach the third round at a major until the 2020 U.S. Open at age 26. All three of her Grand Slam semifinal runs — along with her 2024 U.S. Open final — have come after she turned 30.
Pegula said this week that her patience and persistence stem from “always being a little more mature for my age even when I was younger.”
“I think as I’ve gotten older, your perspective changes as well,” she added.
Pegula, whose parents are principal owners of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills and the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, acknowledges that her wealthy family background can cut two ways.
Financial security offers freedom to push through the sport’s early years on tour, when results are uncertain and the grind is relentless. That same cushion might make it easier to walk away if the climb becomes too frustrating.
Jessica Pegula plays a backhand against Donna Vekic during their match at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.
(Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)
Pegula says her motivation to pursue tennis came well before her family’s fortune grew.
“I’ve been wanting to be a professional tennis player and No. 1 in the world since I was like 7,” she said in a small interview room after beating Ostapenko this week.
“It’s a privilege, but at the same time I don’t want to do myself a disservice of not taking the opportunity as well,” she explained. “I’ve always looked at it that way.”
In the last few seasons, that maturity on the court has dovetailed with a growing leadership role off it.
Pegula has served for years on the WTA Player Council and was recently tapped to chair the tour’s new Tour Architecture Council, a working group tasked with examining the increasingly demanding schedule and structural pressures players say have intensified in recent seasons. The panel is expected to explore changes that could reshape the calendar and player workload in coming years.
Pegula said she hadn’t put up her hand to be involved but agreed after several players approached her to take the lead role — though she declined to say who they were.
“I think maybe as you mature … you realize how important it is to give back to the sport,” she said last week.
Life has also provided grounding and a wider lens.
Pegula’s mother, Kim, suffered a serious cardiac arrest in 2022, a situation she discussed in detail in a moving 2023 essay for “The Players’ Tribune.”
The Buffalo native and Florida resident also married businessman Taylor Gahagen in 2021. Gahagen helps “holds down the fort” at home with the couple’s dogs and travels with her when possible. He is with her in Indian Wells.
“I have an amazing support system,” Pegula says.
Despite winning 10 WTA singles titles, achieving a career singles high of No. 3 in 2022 and the No. 1 doubles ranking, Pegula’s low-key demeanor means she flies a bit under the radar.
She’s not one for fashion statements, outlandish antics or attention-seeking initiatives, her joint podcast with close friend Madison Keys notwithstanding.
Instead, Pegula tends to go about her business quietly, relying on a calm temperament and a methodical style that wears opponents down over time.
She gets the job done — the Tim Duncan of the women’s tour.
“She’s just all about lacing them up and competing between the lines, and then trying to be as big an asset as she can to her peers off the court,” says Mark Knowles, the former doubles standout who has shared coaching duties with Mark Merklein since early 2024.
“I think one of her great attributes is she’s very level-headed,” Knowles adds. “She doesn’t get too high, doesn’t get too low.”
Her tennis identity echoes her steadiness.
Instead of bludgeoning opponents with power, the 5-foot-7 Pegula beats them with savvy, steadiness and tactical variety. A careful student of the game, she studies matchups and patrols the court with a composed efficiency that incrementally drains big hitters and outmaneuvers most rivals long before the final score confirms it.
Keys calls that consistency her “superpower.”
“She doesn’t lose matches that she shouldn’t lose,” the 2025 Australian Open champion said this week.
Because of injuries in the early part of her career, Knowles says Pegula might have less wear-and-tear than other players her age. And he and her team have prioritized rest and recovery, which included the decision to skip the tournament in Doha last month following her tiring Australian Open run.
On brand, there was no panic in Pegula after dropping the first set in her two matches so far at Indian Wells. As she’s done all season, she steadied herself to earn three-set wins.
Bucket-list goals remain, however. Chiefly, capturing a Grand Slam title.
Jessica Pegula returns a shot to Jelena Ostapenko during the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells on Monday.
(Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)
Pegula jokes that she briefly interrupted a run of American female success when she fell in the 2024 U.S. Open final to No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. But seeing close friend and teenage phenom Keys capture her major in Melbourne last year — after many wondered if her window had passed — hit closer to home.
“I think Madison winning Australia just motivated me even more,” Pegula says.
Although Pegula believes she is among the best hardcourt players in women’s tennis, that confidence hasn’t translated into success in the California desert. She has reached the quarterfinals just once in 10 previous appearances in Indian Wells.
“Why not try and add that one to the resume?” says Knowles, noting that she had never won the title in Dubai until last month. “She’s playing still at a very high level.”
Pegula says the key to keeping things fresh is maintaining her love of the game by continuing to improve and experiment with new ideas, a process that keeps her engaged mentally and eager to compete.
“I’m not afraid to kind of take that risk of changing and working on different things,” she says, “which just keeps my mind working and problem solving.”
For a player who never needed tennis, she remains determined to see how much more it can give her.
Sports
Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo makes NBA history with 83-point game
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Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo made NBA history on Tuesday night.
Adebayo scored 83 points, all while setting league marks for free throws made and attempted in a game for the Miami Heat in a 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. It is the second-highest scoring game for a player ever, only to Wilt Chamberlain’s famed 100-point game.
“An absolutely surreal night,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters after the game.
Adebayo started with a 31-point first quarter. He was up to 43 at halftime, 62 by the end of the third quarter. And then came the fourth, when the milestones kept falling despite facing double-, triple- and what once appeared to be a quadruple-team from a Wizards defense that kept sending him to the foul line.
He finished 20 of 43 from the field, 36 of 43 from the foul line, 7 for 22 from 3-point range.
After the game, he was seen in tears while he hugged his mother, Marilyn Blount, before leaving the floor after the game.
“Welp won’t have the highest career high in the house anymore,” Adebayo’s girlfriend, four-time WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson, wrote on social media, “but at least it gives me something to go after.”
MAGIC’S ANTHONY BLACK MAKES INCREDIBLE DUNK OVER FOUR DEFENDERS IN HISTORIC NBA GAME
Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat celebrates during the fourth quarter of the game against the Washington Wizards at Kaseya Center on March 10, 2026, in Miami, Florida. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)
The NBA’s previous best this season was 56, by Nikola Jokic for Denver against Minnesota on Christmas night. The last player to have 62 points through three quarters: one of Adebayo’s basketball heroes, Kobe Bryant, who had exactly that many through three quarters for the Los Angeles Lakers against Dallas on Dec. 20, 2005.
He wound up passing Bryant for single-game scoring as well. Bryant’s career-best was 81 — a game that was the second-best on the NBA scoring list for two decades.
Adebayo scored 31 points in the opening quarter against the Wizards, breaking the Heat record for points in any quarter — and tying the team record for points in a first half before the second quarter even started.
He finished the first half with 43 points, a team record for any half and two points better than his previous career high — for a full game, that is — of 41, set Jan. 23, 2021, against Brooklyn.
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Adebayo’s season high entering Tuesday was 32. He matched that with a free throw with 5:53 left in the second quarter, breaking the Heat first-half scoring record.
Adebayo’s 43-point first half was the NBA’s second-best in at least the last 30 seasons — going back to the start of the digital play-by-play era that began in the 1996-97 season.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
Kings lose in overtime to the Boston Bruins
BOSTON — Charlie McAvoy scored 39 seconds into overtime and Jeremy Swayman stopped 14 shots on Tuesday night to earn the Boston Bruins their 13th straight victory at home, 2-1 over the Kings.
Mason Lohrei scored midway through the third period to break a scoreless tie. But the Kings tied it five minutes later when Drew Doughty’s shot from the blue line deflected off the heel of Bruins forward Elias Lindholm and into the net.
It was the seventh straight time the teams had gone to overtime in Boston.
In the overtime, Mark Kastelic blocked a shot in the defensive zone and made a long pass to David Pastrnak, who waited for McAvoy to come into the zone. The Bruins’ defenseman and U.S. Olympian, who went to the locker room at the end of the second period after taking a puck off his mouth, skated in on Darcy Kuemper and went to his backhand for the winner.
Kuemper stopped 21 shots for the Kings, who entered the night one point out of the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference. The victory kept Boston in possession of the East’s second wild-card spot.
Swayman tied his career high with his 25th win of the season. The Bruins haven’t lost at the TD Garden since before Christmas.
After the game, Kings forward and future Hall of Famer Anze Kopitar stayed on the ice to shake hands with the Bruins after what is expected to be his last game in Boston.
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