Caitlin Clark’s Indiana Fever One of Three WNBA Teams Sue Bird Doesn’t Want to Face in Playoffs
The 2024 WNBA regular season is in its final month and the playoff picture is becoming clearer with each passing day. While the New York Liberty and Las Vegas Aces remain favorites to win the title, Sue Bird believes there are three rosters no team would want to match up against in the playoffs. Among them is Caitlin Clark’s Indiana Fever.
On a recent episode of A Touch More podcast, the WNBA icon claimed that the rookie and her teammates would be tough to put away and warned the rest of the league that they could embark on a deep run. Explaining the reason behind her faith in the Fever, she said,
“What I’ve learned in my WNBA experience is that pace of play trumps physicality, it trumps size, it can trump experience… What I see in Caitlin, what I see in Kelsey Mitchell, they’re just like ramming it down people’s throats and it’s really hard. It can have your head spinning.”
Clark and her team have been exceptional in their first two games since the season resumed last week. They beat the Phoenix Mercury 98-89 before thrashing the Seattle Storm 92-75. The rookie sensation averaged 26 points, 9.5 assists, and five rebounds in those two wins.
Bird lauded the guard and advised teams to pivot back to treating her like she was the sole threat on offense on her team. The icon said,
“Everybody, that’s why you have to pick Caitlin up full court…The numbers she’s putting up now, like, this is why.”
After explaining why she backed the Fever to do well in the playoffs, she named two more teams she believed would be tough to beat.
Storm and Mercury get a shoutout from Sue Bird
Bird claimed she wouldn’t want to face the Phoenix Mercury in the playoffs due to their talent and experience. She claimed that the team is strong and the presence of two future Hall of Famers and Olympic gold medalists on the roster make them a tough matchup. She said,
“I don’t wanna see Phoenix. Kahleah Copper is balling. They’ve added Monique Billings, not trying to see that. And with D[iana Taurasi] and [Brittney Griner]… Yes, the WNBA playoffs is a series. But in the one game, those two, you just never know.”
The last team on her list was the Seattle Storm, who were yet to add Gabby Williams to their roster. During the taping of the podcast episode, Bird implored the team to land the French star and they seemingly heard her pleas as they announced that she had signed a contract until the end of the season with the franchise.
The forward did not play in the first half of the WNBA season to prioritize her Olympics preparation. Her efforts paid dividends as she won the Best Defensive Player, earned a spot on the All-Star Five, and led the hosts to a silver medal at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Williams’ return to Seattle, where she played in 2022 and 2023, is a massive boost to the Storm’s odds of pulling off an upset in the playoffs and proving Bird right.
About the author
-
Siddid Dey Purkayastha •
How LeBron James Ensured a $115,000,000 Adidas Chase By Showing Off Nike Kicks: “Vaccaro Was There First”
-
Tonoy Sengupta •
Joel Embiid Net Worth 2023: How Much Money Does the 76ers Star Have and Which Brands Give it to Him
-
Akash Murty •
“Kobe Bryant Wasn’t Michael Jordan Carrying Teams to 5 Titles”: Jason Whitlock Once Called Lakers Star ‘Most Fraudulent Athlete’ For Imitating MJ
-
Advait Jajodia •
“Scottie Pippen is very deserving of the same $30 million contract I get”: When Michael Jordan spoke highly of his Bulls “brother” after winning the 1997 NBA Championship
-
Ashish Priyadarshi •
“Tom Brady’s chances of going to the Super Bowl are greater than Stephen Curry’s chances of making a three”: When Steve Kerr tried to put Tom Brady and his greatness into words by pulling out an insane stat
-
Advait Jajodia •
“I’ve Never Ever Thrown the Ball in the Rim”: Gilbert Arenas Scoffs at People Discounting Ja Morant’s Dunk on Victor Wembanyama
