Caitlin Clark misses early All-Star events
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All-Star weekend brings people together. While the game itself doesn't kick off until tomorrow, the partying has already begun across the WNBA. Stars arrived i
The New York Liberty handed the Fever their worst defeat of the season, routing Indiana 98-77, who played without star Caitlin Clark.
One of the buzzwords often heard in sports media today is “eventize.” But the word is far from new. For instance, a 2004 New York Times Magazine piece on the explosion of DVDs as a marketing play reveals that “eventize” is a word the writer has been hearing a lot around Los Angeles.
Now, Proctor is representing Kalen DeBoer's program in Atlanta. The sky is the limit for one of the best athletes to ever come out of Iowa. Just don't put him in the conversation with Clark, he doesn't think he's earned that yet.
The state of Iowa has produced some exciting talent across sports, particularly in recent seasons. That’s included Alabama Crimson Tide offensive lineman Kadyn Proctor, as well as WNBA star Caitlin Clark.
Before she became a national star at Iowa, Caitlin Clark actually committed to play college basketball elsewhere.
Bluder's words perhaps take on more relevance now, nearly a month after Clark's latest dust-up with Connecticut Sun's Marina Mabrey. Clark's teammate, Sophie Cunningham, showed her willingness to defend Clark during a heated Fever-Sun contest that saw Clark get shoved to the ground and featured a chaotic end-of-game brawl.