• Economy
  • Investing
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Editor’s Pick
Market Gains Updates
Sports

Fever should force Caitlin Clark to sit until she’s fully healthy

by July 18, 2025
by July 18, 2025

INDIANAPOLIS — The fury at the refs and opposing WNBA players was misplaced. You want to be mad at someone for jeopardizing Caitlin Clark’s health?

Point the finger at her own team: the Indiana Fever.

Clark was forced to withdraw from this weekend’s All-Star Game here because of a groin injury. A groin injury that’s different than the one from which she’d returned from on July 9. It’s also a different injury than the quad strain that cost her five games earlier in the season.

Different, too, from the “tightness” in her quad that kept Clark out of a preseason game.

“I am incredibly sad and disappointed to say I can’t participate in the 3-point Contest or the All-Star Game,” Clark, selected as an All-Star captain along with Napheesa Collier, said in a statement released by the Fever. “I have to rest my body.”

It’s clear she should have done so long before now.

After not missing a single game in her four years at Iowa and first year in the WNBA, Clark has already missed 11 games this season. Someone needs to explain how a player who has been durable until now keeps getting similar injuries, and that starts with the Fever.

Is it possible that Clark’s quad injury didn’t contribute to her groin injury and the first groin injury didn’t contribute to the second groin injury? Sure. But that’s an awful lot of coincidences. More likely? Clark came back too soon and, whether consciously or not, was compensating for one injury, thereby making her susceptible to the next.

And that’s on the Fever.

Clark is, as everyone knows, hyper competitive. She was no doubt lobbying the Fever’s medical staff and coach Stephanie White to let her back on the court as soon as possible. Younger athletes — heck, all young people — also often think they’re invincible, and the 23-year-old Clark might have believed she was ready to return.

But injured athletes often need to be saved from themselves, particularly with injuries that can seem healed when they’re not.

Anyone who’s watched Clark play since the quad injury could see something was off. She played well in the first two games back and then began struggling. Her scoring is down, as is her completion rate.

Most notably, she’s just 7 of 49 from 3-point range in her last seven games, including two oh-fers. After a career of being the human version of a Pop-a-Shot, she suddenly became … average. That’s not just somebody who’s trying to get their timing back. Something was off, and someone should have stepped in to get her off the floor.

Again, Clark no doubt wants to play and probably feels as if she’s invincible. We’ve all been there! Clark also knows people often pay a lot of money to watch her play, not sit the bench, and her presence on the floor translates into ratings. She can see every day just how much hosting the All-Star game means to both the Fever and Indianapolis.

But that’s where Fever officials needed to be the adults in the room. The only consideration these last two months needed to be Clark’s health and well-being, and if that means disappointing fans or broadcast partners or sponsors or even Clark herself, so be it.

Clark is the biggest star the WNBA has — not its only one, but its biggest one — and everyone needs to be thinking about the long game here. Getting Clark back for a couple of games only to have her miss twice as many more because she’s aggravated an injury or gotten a new one is counterproductive. For everyone.

White has had no problem calling out refs who she believes aren’t doing enough to protect Clark. But the Fever need to be protecting her, too, and they’ve been falling short.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY
0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

previous post
NHL offseason tracker: Jets winger gets long-term deal
next post
Premier League power rankings: Each team’s odds to win 2025-26 title

You may also like

Video shows new angle of Mr. Met’s fall...

July 19, 2025

NASCAR Hall of Famer Rex White, the 1960...

July 19, 2025

Premier League power rankings: Each team’s odds to...

July 18, 2025

Pogacar wins Tour de France Stage 13 time...

July 18, 2025

Former NFLPA leader charged strip club visits to...

July 18, 2025

NHL offseason tracker: Jets winger gets long-term deal

July 18, 2025

Noose found at Titans new stadium site halts...

July 18, 2025

Open Championship leaderboard highlights, second-round results, scores

July 18, 2025

Who will crash NFL’s playoff party? Ranking 18...

July 18, 2025

Caitlin Clark not at WNBA All-Star events, but...

July 18, 2025
Enter Your Information Below To Receive Free Trading Ideas, Latest News And Articles.

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

    Top News

    A flagging U.S. industry looks for new life...

    July 18, 2025

    Coca-Cola dodges after Trump says soda will switch...

    July 18, 2025

    Trump says it’s ‘highly unlikely’ he will fire...

    July 17, 2025

    Inflation picks up again in June as tariffs...

    July 16, 2025

    Jerome Powell asks inspector general to review Fed’s...

    July 15, 2025

    • About us
    • Contacts
    • Email Whitelisting
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 MarketGainsUpdates.com All Rights Reserved.

    Market Gains Updates
    • Economy
    • Investing
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Editor’s Pick