đ„ âIt Happened Againâ: Caitlin Clark Powers Fever to Win, Then Breaks Down as Groin Injury Reignites Concern Across WNBA
By Tessa Morgan | Lead WNBA Reporter, The Athletic
Boston, MA â
It was supposed to be a celebration. A signature road win. A third consecutive victory for the surging Indiana Fever, who battled tooth and nail to defeat the Connecticut Sun 85â77. But as the final buzzer sounded, the only thing anyone could talk about was what happened just moments earlier: Caitlin Clark doubled over in pain, clutching her groin, then slumping into the stanchion as tears welled in her eyes.

This wasnât a routine cramp. This wasnât a bump or bruise. This was the WNBAâs most electric talent showing visible signs of a body pushed past its limits â and a league holding its breath.
Clark, who finished with 14 points, 8 rebounds, and 7 assists, had just strung together a dazzling fourth-quarter run that helped break the game wide open. Her shot-making, court vision, and pace lifted the Fever down the stretch. But as the bench roared and teammates pounded fists, Clark grimaced and reached for her right groin. She exited hunched and hurting, concealing her face as she leaned into the stanchion in a moment that silenced the TD Garden crowd.
âShe just felt a little something in her groin,â Fever head coach Stephanie White said postgame. âWeâll evaluate and see.â
But fans arenât reassured â not this time.
This marks the latest flare-up in whatâs becoming a troubling pattern: preseason muscle tightness, a re-aggravated quad, multiple games with limited minutes, and now, a groin injury that clearly impacted her ability to walk, let alone play.
âThis isnât just soreness anymore,â one league executive told The Athletic anonymously. âItâs cumulative. And if theyâre not careful, it could become chronic.â
âShe Took Over â Then She Broke Downâ
Clarkâs fourth-quarter performance was vintage Caitlin. A pull-up three. A high-arc floater. Two made free throws. A laser of a backdoor assist to Kelsey Mitchell. It was the kind of run that wins games and sells out arenas. But it came at a cost.
Moments later, she buckled.
The groin grab was immediate. The expression on her face â unmistakable. Pain. Fear. Frustration. And, many argue, the culmination of weeks of overuse.
Fans, analysts, and former players have now turned their attention to the Feverâs medical management of their rookie star. From inconsistent minutes to rushed returns, critics say the franchise has repeatedly prioritized optics over long-term health.
âYou canât keep selling her like a headliner at every tour stop and expect her body to hold up,â a former WNBA veteran posted. âSit her down. Let her recover. Protect the asset.â
Ugly Win, Growing Crisis
The game itself was a grind. Kelsey Mitchell led Indiana with 20 points, while Natasha Howard posted a 18-point, 13-rebound double-double. Aliyah Boston, despite struggling from the field, impacted the game with her size and presence inside.
Defensively, the Fever locked in late. But even players admitted: this wasnât about style points.
âSometimes you win ugly,â said Katie Lou Samuelson. âAnd sometimes, it costs more than it should.â
Clarkâs teammates are watching the toll firsthand. Her body has absorbed contact all season â from hard screens to no-call slams â and White has danced around it.
When asked directly if Clark is defended differently, White smiled and quipped, âAre you trying to get me fined again?â before adding, more seriously:
âThereâs a level of physicality allowed on her that isnât the same. Weâve got to help her adjust.â
Translation: They see it. Everyone sees it. But the whistles still arenât coming.
A Win⊠But At What Cost?
Indiana plays again tomorrow night in Brooklyn against the Liberty. Clarkâs status remains uncertain. The team says sheâll be re-evaluated before tipoff. But fans â and many across the league â are now demanding the Fever shut her down, even temporarily.
No All-Star Weekend. No three-point contest. No more gameday stunts. Just rest.
âThis team wasnât built just to make the playoffs,â said Fever guard Sophie Cunningham. âItâs to make a run. So we need to be smart.â
The Real Scoreboard
The Indiana Fever are on a three-game winning streak and climbing the standings. But the scoreboard that really matters â Caitlin Clarkâs health, her future, her longevity â is showing red flags.
âSheâs the most valuable player in the WNBA, and she hasnât even been named an All-Star yet,â one analyst tweeted. âBut she wonât be anything if sheâs broken by August.â
If this moment in Boston taught us anything, itâs this:
Caitlin Clark can carry this league â but she canât carry it alone. And if the Fever canât protect her, someone else must.
Because one more âlittle something,â and the WNBAâs biggest star might not get back up.

