Aliyah Boston reminded the room how humble Caitlin Clark is.
Caitlin Clark shooting on one side of the court in Gainbridge Fieldhouse and passing in another
INDIANAPOLIS — Following many near stat lines this season, Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark has finally become the first rookie in WNBA history to reach triple-double territory. The milestone added onto the Fever’s 83-78 win over the league’s best New York Liberty Saturday afternoon.
It also served as the first triple-double in the Fever’s 25-season history. Clark got it with around seven minutes to go in the contest, with Indiana trailing by nine points. The crowd tipped her off by erupting when she snagged her 10th rebound, and gave her an ovation at the next dead ball.
“Well, I was trying to get the crowd to be quiet,” Clark said after. “Somebody was shooting a free throw and I was like, I appreciate it, but trying to get them to be quiet. Obviously, it’s really cool. My teammates have been finishing the ball really, really at a high rate. My assist numbers, that’s because of them.”
In turn, Clark is now the youngest triple-double holder in the WNBA. The previous player was Clark’s opponent Saturday, actually: Sabrina Ionescu. Clark is 22-years-old. Ionescu got the triple-double at 23 years. The New York Liberty guard remains the fastest to ever do it though. She got it in six career games due to an injury her rookie season. Clark isn’t far off at Game 22.
The feat is grand, still. After minutes at the podium, teammate Aliyah Boston had to step in.
“Honestly, I’m just happy we won,” Clark said. “Like I’ve said, I take a lot of pride in being able to do a lot of different things for this team. I think we’re really good when I can get the ball off the glass and go in transition… my teammates made 13 shots off my passes. That goes to them, but I mean, I don’t know.”
“She’s so humble isn’t she?” Boston interrupted into the room.
“Well I don’t know what to say, I mean it’s great, I don’t know,” Clark replied.
“Well let me tell ya,” Boston countered. “That was pretty cool Caitlin. Great job sister.”
Caitlin Clark on how the win adds to the triple-double: “Honestly, I’m just happy we won — [ends with] — but I mean, I don’t know.”
Aliyah Boston then interrupts: “She’s so humble isn’t she? Well let me tell ya. That was pretty cool Caitlin. Great job sister!”
How the Fever rallied to beat the Liberty
Going into Saturday, the Liberty bested the Fever in all three prior matchups this season by 86 points combined. When Fever head coach Christie Sides was asked pregame how she could muster the confidence that 17-3 New York is even beatable, she replied with all the confidence in the world. Out of the gate, the Fever went up 15-6 in the first five minutes. Could they do it?
Clark hit three triples in the first quarter, but later didn’t make any of her next eight. The Fever trailed by as many as 11 points with just under nine minutes to go. They came back at Phoenix not too long ago, but New York is the best team in the league. It didn’t matter. Clark made an and-1 layup. And 20 seconds later, she pushed in transition. Kelsey Mitchell hit the tying three.
Gainbridge Fieldhouse lost it. The roof could’ve become unhinged to nobody’s shock.
Caitlin Clark, Fever’s postgame celebration
New York Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu (20) and Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) watch a free throw Saturday
Grace Smith/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK
Fever players and Sides were fired up after the Phoenix win. That victory was signature at the time last week, but the Mercury’s record is level. Saturday was the Fever’s first win over any of the four top WNBA teams this season in front of the raucous home crowd. They were 0-9 prior.
“Well, we gave them two days off in this last week, so they really think that’s what it was,” Sides bantered. “They fought differently tonight and they know that. When I walked in, they were giving everybody the credit. They were really happy for Lexie [Hull]… really happy for [Damiris] Dantas… they showered Caitlin.”
Hull and Dantas, both bench players, made all their shots in the fourth quarter for 10 points. At one point, It looked like the Liberty may march and suffocate the Fever into the season sweep. Indiana outscored New York 17-6 in the final five minutes. Many players made distinct impacts.
That’s what it takes.
Matthew Byrne is the Indiana Fever reporter at ClutchPoints. Originally from New Jersey, Matthew graduated from Indiana University’s Media School in May 2024. He loves bagel breakfast sandwiches, revitalizing the midrange game in pickup basketball, and writing ab
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