The preseason was supposed to be about reps. Rhythm. Preparation.
But for the Indiana Fever, it became something else entirely.

It became a statement.

A rookie nearly benched.
A fourth-quarter eruption.
A quiet player turning into a dagger.
And in the end—a perfect 3–0 preseason finish that has the rest of the WNBA on high alert.

Led by Caitlin Clark’s logo bombs and Lexie Hull’s fourth-quarter fireworks, Indiana didn’t just win their final game—they threw down a challenge. A 81–76 victory over the Atlanta Dream that felt more like a playoff warning than a preseason exhibition.


A Scare Before the Storm

The drama started before the opening tip.

Just 24 hours before Indiana faced Atlanta, rumors swirled that Clark had suffered a minor leg injury in practice—a collision with a scout team player that reignited concerns about a previously strained leg.

Fever fans flooded social media, refreshing feeds, hunting for updates.

Would she sit?
Would the Fever risk their most valuable asset in a meaningless game?

Then came the announcement:

Clark would play—and she would start.

What happened next silenced every doubt.


She Pulled Up From 36 Feet

Early in the first quarter, with the game still finding its rhythm, Clark caught the ball just inside the half-court line.

She didn’t hesitate.

She didn’t check her feet.

She launched.

She stepped into it without hesitation. A full 36 feet. The crowd gasped—but didn’t make a sound. For a second, the gym froze.
The ball rose like a flare into the air.
And when it snapped through the net, it wasn’t just three points—it was a declaration.

By halftime, she’d tallied 13 points, 7 assists, and 6 rebounds in just 23 minutes.

“She’s shooting the deep ones like they’re nothing,” one analyst posted.
“I think her range just got scarier.”

And that was with a bruised leg.


“She Deserves to Sit—She Chose to Play”

In her postgame comments, Clark downplayed the injury:

“I feel good. Honestly, just being smart with it. It’s the preseason. But I wanted to be out there with my team.”

No dramatics. No excuses. Just basketball.


The Tech, The Temper, and the Teammate Who Stepped In

Midway through the second quarter, Clark let her emotions boil over.

After a missed call and turnover that led to a Dream fast break, she slammed the ball against the basket stanchion.

The whistle came fast: technical foul.

The moment could’ve unraveled her.

Instead, Sophie Cunningham stepped in.

The veteran guard pulled Clark away, calmed her down, and stopped a spark from becoming a fire.

It was a small moment—but it said everything about Indiana’s chemistry.

One fan wrote: “You don’t just see teammates. You see protectors.”

Minutes later, Cunningham would suffer an ankle injury of her own, exiting the game in visible pain. Her status for the season opener remains uncertain.


The Fourth Quarter Belonged to Lexie Hull

With Clark’s minutes being managed and Cunningham out, the Fever needed someone else to step up.

Enter Lexie Hull.

The former starter had been quiet all preseason, accepting her role off the bench with quiet professionalism.

But against Atlanta, something changed.

Lexie wasn’t loud. She wasn’t flashy. But that night, she moved like someone who had waited quietly for her moment—and when the spotlight finally landed, she didn’t blink.

In just one quarter, Hull scored 11 of her 14 points.

She drove past defenders. Hit clutch mid-range jumpers. Drew fouls and made free throws.
Her defense created havoc.
Her movement opened up the floor.
Her confidence—undeniable.


Coach White Saw It Coming

After the game, head coach Stephanie White couldn’t hide her smile.

“When you accept your role like Lexie does, you can’t let it put you in a box. She’s stretched her game. She’s earned our trust.”

White explained how Hull’s 3-on-3 championship experience had sharpened her confidence and one-on-one awareness.

“She was fearless out there. She didn’t just keep us in the game. She helped finish it.”

And it’s true.

The Fever’s final minutes weren’t about Clark.

They were about depth.

They were about Lexie Hull announcing she’s more than a rotation player. She’s a threat.


Not Just Wins—A Message to the League

Three games. Three wins.

Against Washington.
Against Brazil.
And now, Atlanta.

But more than that—three different styles of victory:

One dominated by bigs (Boston vs. Brazil)

One carried by shooters (Clark & Mitchell vs. Washington)

And one closed out by the bench (Hull vs. Atlanta)

The Fever aren’t a one-trick pony.

They’re becoming a full orchestra.


And Fans? They’re Already Listening

At one point during the Atlanta game, a man in the front row held up a hand-made sign:

“Drove 6 hours to see her shoot from the logo.”

He brought his daughter. They wore matching jerseys.

And when Clark pulled up from 36 feet?

“Told you it’d be worth it,” he whispered.

It wasn’t just worth it.

It was unforgettable.


A Glimpse of the Future

The Fever open the season May 17 against the Chicago Sky, and all eyes will be on Clark. On Hull. On Boston. On Mitchell.
On Cunningham’s recovery.

But beneath the surface, something bigger is forming.

An identity.

A chemistry.

A hunger.

“We’re still building,” Clark said postgame. “But I think we’re ahead of schedule. And it’s exciting.”


Final Word: This Isn’t a Team That’s Figuring Itself Out

They’ve figured it out.
And now, they’re daring the league to catch up.

They didn’t just sweep the preseason.
They didn’t just win three games.
They showed they can survive pressure, protect each other, and close games without relying on just one name.

And if this is what Indiana looks like before the season even starts…

What happens when the games actually count?