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The entire Gainbridge Fieldhouse was on its feet when they witnessed Caitlin Clark’s greatness; after all, she is called the ‘Queen of Basketball’ for a reason. For most of the Indiana Fever vs. the Washington Mystics, things were far from smooth for Clark and her team. Because what started as a dominant run quickly turned into a frustrating battle as the Washington Mystics completely flipped the switch.

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Still, even when most fans felt the Mystics did enough to seal the win, Clark completely changed the energy of the game in the fourth quarter. Her late scoring surge brought the Fever back from the brink, but the moment that everyone will remember came in the final seconds of regulation, when she drilled a clutch game-tying three-pointer to force overtime and send the entire arena into chaos. However, the game still ended in favor of the Mystics with 104-102

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So after the heartbreaking OT loss, Clark opened up about both her heroic and the bigger issues that ultimately cost the Indiana Fever the game.

“That’s like the hardest thing as a basketball player, is when you’re not making shots, to really stay in it. So, I was certainly proud of myself. Really, really battled,” she said.

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“If we don’t have three clunky quarters,” she added, “we don’t force ourselves into basketball heroics like we don’t want to play that way. I know it’s exciting for the crowd, but we should have had ourselves in a position, especially after the first quarter, to control this ball game, and we really didn’t.”

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Caitlin Clark finished the night with 32 points, 8 assists, and 7 made three-pointers. So far, this was her best offensive performance of the young 2026 season. So thanks to her, the Fever got their first lead since the second quarter, when, with 6:51 left on the clock, she buried her fifth three-pointer of the night.

But despite her scoring explosion late in the game, Indiana’s overall offensive inconsistency remained the biggest issue.

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After opening the night on fire and knocking down six threes in the first quarter alone, the Fever completely lost their rhythm through the second and third quarters. To put things in perspective, Indiana managed to score just nine points in the second quarter.

“Our biggest room for improvement is when things aren’t going well, we still need to be able to defend and get stops,” she added, as per Scott Agness.

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Still, despite all the frustration surrounding the loss, the Fever walked away believing this group is much closer to becoming the championship-level team they expect themselves to be.

Caitlin Clark’s Late Heroics Leave Stephanie White Encouraged Despite Fever Collapse

With this loss behind them, the Indiana Fever currently sits with two losses and one win, which came against the Los Angeles Sparks.

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But head coach Stephanie White doesn’t really care about the scoreboard because what’s important for her is how her team fought.

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“I thought our whole group showed resilience in that rally,” coach White said after the game. “We showed the ability to make tough shots, we had some really good time and score execution moments, offensively and defensively. We just have to have more of it consistently.”

And honestly, that probably remains the biggest takeaway for Indiana moving forward. The Fever have already shown flashes of how dangerous they can look offensively when Clark, Kelsey Mitchell, and the rest of the lineup are playing freely and more aggressively. But at the same time, this game also exposed how quickly momentum can disappear when their offensive rhythm falls apart for long stretches.

So now, the Fever will quickly turn their attention toward another major test when they host the Seattle Storm on May 17 as their homestand continues.

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Ojus Verma

786 Articles

Ojus Verma is a College Basketball and WNBA author at EssentiallySports. As head of the Analysis Desk and a former player with 13 years of experience, he specializes in decoding tactics, player development, and the evolution of rivalries shaping the game. Ojus’ coverage of the Caitlin Clark-Angel Reese saga, dating back to their college days, has earned recognition for its balance of insight and context.

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