
Caitlin Clark Talks Evolving Leadership Role with Fever: 'I Want to Motivate Them'
Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark is already embracing a leadership role within the team in her rookie season.
"I think as a point guard you have to be vocal, whether I want to or whether I don't want to. There's no choice there," she told reporters following Wednesday's 89-84 defeat to the Washington Mystics.
"If you're gonna be the point guard, you have to be vocal for your team. They look to me to call a play every single dead ball. They look to me to call a play when the other team goes to the free-throw line. But also, I want to motivate them and encourage them and be somebody that they can lean on. I feel like that's something I'm gonna continue to still find my voice in. Obviously I'm a rookie and still trying to kind of learn my way and learn my teammates at the same time. I think it's definitely an area I've improved in and I'm gonna continue to improve in."
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Clark's playmaking ability at Iowa got somewhat overshadowed by her prodigious scoring. She averaged 8.2 assists over her four years at Iowa, which is the sixth-highest number in Division I dating back to the 1987-88 season.
That's part of the reason why the 6'0" guard was a great fit for the Indiana Fever. Her game allowed her to adjust relatively well to a roster that included reigning Rookie of the Year Aliyah Boston and 2023 All-Star Kelsey Mitchell.
Clark's first year hasn't gone totally according to plan so far. She has been a more inefficient shooter compared to her college days (39.3 percent), and her 127 turnovers are far and away the most in the WNBA. The Fever are also 9-14 and eighth in the league standings.
Still, the 22-year-old has a clear understanding of the function she occupies on the floor right now and the expectations she carries as Indiana's designated floor general.



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