
Napheesa Collier's record-breaking performance leads her team to victory in WNBA All-Star Game
Worcester's Aliyah Boston from the Indiana Fever, as well as the rest of the WNBA's All-Stars, made a statement with their warmup tees before last night's game in Indianapolis.
Michael Conroy/Associated Press
Captain Caitlin Clark was unable to play for her team because of a groin injury she suffered Tuesday in
Known for her deep logo 3-pointers, Clark would have loved a chance at the 4-point shot that was added to this game, which was 28 feet from the basket.
Advertisement
Both teams took advantage of the deep shot en route to the record-setting offensive night.
The 151 points scored by Team Collier broke the mark put up by Team Stewart of 143 in 2023 for the most in an All-Star Game. Collier's point total broke Arike Ogunbowale's previous record of 34 points scored last year.
The combined total of 282 also surpassed the previous high total of 270 set in 2023.
While there was little defense played, both teams challenged plays in the fourth quarter with the game not in doubt. One was successful and one wasn't.
Advertisement
The game also featured rookies Paige Bueckers, Sonia Citron, and Kiki Iriafen, making up the largest rookie contingent at the game since 2011. Citron and Iriafen were on Team Clark, and Bueckers was a starter for Napheesa Collier's team.
Kelsey Mitchell of the Indiana Fever and Jackie Young of the Las Vegas Aces were announced earlier in the day as starters for Team Clark, replacing Clark and Satou Sabally of Phoenix. Mitchell received a loud ovation from the fans who were happy to have another one of their players in the starting lineup.
Young didn't actually start or play in the game as Gabby Williams took her spot as a starter. Young injured her hip in Las Vegas' last game before All-Star weekend.
Besides the 4-point shot, the game also included a 20-second shot clock instead of the normal 24, and the ability for teams to substitute during live play. There also were no free throws shot — not that there usually are many in an All-Star Game — until the final two minutes of the game. Instead players were automatically awarded the points. The only free throws shot were by Skylar Diggins with 1:01 left in the game. She made both.
All four rules had been used at some point during previous All-Star Games, but not all in the same one.
The All-Star Game brought the stars out in Indianapolis. Rapper GloRilla performed at halftime, while musicians Common and Jennifer Hudson sat courtside near WNBA legends Lisa Leslie and Tamika Catchings. Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton sat in a suite and got the loudest ovation from the crowd when he was shown on the videoboard.
Advertisement

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indianapolis Star
a minute ago
- Indianapolis Star
Caitlin Clark may be out for a bit. How do Fever adjust without her? 'We're better when she's involved'
INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Fever may have to brace to be without star Caitlin Clark for a significant amount of time — again. Clark, who has had bad luck injury-wise this season, suffered her fourth separate muscle injury of the season July 15 against the Connecticut Sun. That injury forced her to pull out of the 3-point contest and the All-Star Game in Indianapolis this past weekend. Fever coach Stephanie White said following practice Monday that Clark is going to meet with doctors on Monday and Tuesday for additional opinions on her injury. Clark will make the trip to New York for Tuesday's game against the Liberty, but she is not anticipated to be available to play. The Fever have not set a timetable for her return, waiting to see the opinions of doctors in the next couple days. 'These soft tissue injuries sometimes nag until you can actually have time to really allow them to heal in the offseason,' White said Sunday. 'So we'll just take it one day at a time and as they come, and this group will continue to progress together.' Caitlin Clark's All-Star weekend: She was humble, funny and very serious about higher pay More: Caitlin Clark 'beyond thankful' for WNBA All-Star weekend, fans in Indy Clark has missed 11 of the Fever's 23 games with various injuries this season: she suffered a left quad strain on May 24 that kept her out for five games over a two-week period, then suffered a left groin injury on June 26 that kept her out another five games and two weeks. She has already missed one game with this most recent injury, as the Fever played in New York on July 16. It's been a frustrating season for Clark, who hadn't suffered any injuries in her collegiate or professional career before this season. "When the injury happened, it was pretty frustrating, considering, I knew what the coming days were gonna hold for myself," Clark said Saturday ahead of the All-Star Game. "But I feel like dealing with that, and then also just like trying to look at it in the most positive manner that I can. ... I think just it all comes back to having a good perspective on everything." The Fever (12-11) have, in spurts, figured out how to find a flow without her. Indiana is 8-6 with Clark on the floor, and 4-5 without her — 5-5 including a Commissioner's Cup win over the league-leading Minnesota Lynx, which isn't tallied in the regular-season standings. The game definitely flows differently without Clark on the floor. Clark likes to play fast, with frequent passes up the length of the floor for easy baskets ahead of the defense. She can find minuscule openings in defenses for assists, and she draws so much attention with the ball in her hands that she is frequently guarded at 94 feet and double-teamed. The attention defenses give Clark help to space the floor, and her ability to anticipate the defense and find those holes in the schemes can help the Fever move the ball. But right now, it's time for someone else to step up. 'We always want her to play. We're better when she's involved and on our roster,' Fever guard Sophie Cunningham said July 16. 'She draws so much attention. Her ability, you know, just to spread the court and pick teams apart is huge, but I do think it gives us confidence knowing that we can be successful without her too… it is important that if someone's missing, who can step up? And I think that we've shown that we can do that.' Aari McDonald, a midseason acquisition for the Fever, will likely take over Clark's starting spot while the star is injured. McDonald, standing at 5-6, does like to play in transition, but she isn't as fast or anticipatory as Clark. The Fever tend to move to more of a classic half-court offense when Clark is out of the game, and that is likely what they'll return to in her absence. It's something that can be successful, but it's also an offense that is more predictable. But Indiana has also shown it can get into a flow without Clark — evidenced by a three-game win streak that included a Commissioner's Cup win over the Lynx. The margin for error is less, but the Fever can still be successful without Clark. 'I think it changes our offense a little bit, where some teams are going to be a little more back, depending on matchups on the floor,' Fever forward Aliyah Boston said. 'I think we space the floor really well. Everything changes when we hit shots. "I think if we come out and start this next game, hit some shots to open up the floor a lot, and obviously Caitlin's a fantastic passer, but I think if we figure out, once again, different ways to get everyone that needs to touch the ball, the ball, and when and where. So we just continue to trust our offense and let it flow.' The Fever star has missed 13 games overall, including the Commissioner's Cup which doesn't count in the regular-season standings. Indiana is 8-6 with Clark on the floor, and 4-5 without her — 5-5 including a Commissioner's Cup win over the league-leading Minnesota Lynx, which isn't tallied in the regular-season standings. 8 p.m. ET Tuesday, July 22, 2025, at Barclays Center in New York. TV: ESPN, with Ryan Ruocco (play-by-play), Rebecca Lobo (analyst), Holly Rowe (sideline)


NBC Sports
12 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
The Studbudz brought joy, humor to the All-Stars
Natalie Esquire and Callie Fin talk about what could be the best part of All-Star Weekend: The Studbudz. Minnesota Lynx teammates Courtney Williams and Natisha Hiedeman teamed up for an entertaining non-stop livestream.


CNBC
29 minutes ago
- CNBC
Why WNBA players are wearing 'pay us what you owe us' shirts: 'We want to be able to have that fair share'
WNBA players sent a message to the league ahead of their All-Star Game in Indianapolis Saturday: "Pay us what you owe us." All of the players on Team Clark and Team Collier wore shirts with the message as they warmed up in front of a sold-out crowd of over 16,000 attendees and millions more viewers at home. The declaration came days after more than 40 players met with the WNBA and failed to reach a new collective bargaining agreement. The players opted out of their last CBA in October and are negotiating for a better revenue-sharing model, higher salaries, better benefits and a softer salary cap. The players weren't satisfied with the progress in negotiations as they head toward a late-October deadline, the Associated Press reports. They decided to wear the "pay us what you owe us" shirts at a meeting Saturday morning, knowing the All-Star Game was one of the last high-profile events where all players would be in one place before the regular season ends in September. One major sticking point in negotiations between WNBA players and the league is the salary structure and revenue-sharing agreements. The league wants to pay based on a fixed percentage whereas players want "a better share where our salaries grow with the business, and not just a fixed percentage over time," according to Nneka Ogwumike, president of the Women's National Basketball Players Association labor union and Seattle Storm forward. WNBA players currently receive 9.3% of league revenue, including TV deals, tickets and merchandise sales, MarketWatch reports. In comparison, NBA revenue is split roughly 50/50 between players and owners, with players receiving between 49% and 51% of basketball-related income. The WNBA has grown rapidly in recent years, including a new $2.2 billion media deal and expansion fees of $250 million. It recently awarded three new expansion teams to Cleveland, Detroit and Philadelphia, which will grow the league to 18 teams over the next five years. The league had a record 2024 season with historic viewership, attendance and merchandise sales led by fandom around stars like Indiana Fever's Caitlin Clark. In turn, players want a salary structure that gives them a "[larger] piece of the pie that we helped create," Minnesota Lynx forward and 2025 CNBC Changemaker Napheesa Collier said to press after the game. "We want to be able to have that fair share moving forward, especially as we see all of the investment going in, and we want to be able to have our salaries reflected in a structure that makes sense for us," Ogwumike said. WNBA salaries currently range from the league minimum of $66,079 to the maximum of $249,244. The average WNBA base salary is $102,249, according to Spotrac data. The league minimum in the NBA is now $1.27 million and the average salary is more than $13 million, according to data from Sports Reference. Some say comparing the pay structure between the men's and women's leagues isn't exactly fair. The NBA has been around for more than 75 years, has a six-month regular season and brings in billions of dollars in corporate sponsorships, while the WNBA is in its 29th season and plays four months out of the year. The NBA has around $13 billion in revenue while the WNBA is roughly around $200 million, CNBC reported in 2024. To others, WNBA's salary structure is "blatantly unfair to its players," top sports agent Jeff Schwartz said in an interview with CNBC Sport in January. Schwartz founded and runs Excel Sports Management, which represents more than 500 clients including Collier, Clark, Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning and has negotiated billions in athlete contracts. "The WNBA has to figure this out," Schwartz said of the CBA negotiations and player salaries, otherwise many athletes may choose to play overseas to supplement their league income. They could also start their own, like his client Collier's Unrivaled, a 3-on-3 startup women's basketball league which offers players equity and a reported $220,000 paycheck — the highest average player salary of any professional women's sports league, according to Unrivaled. WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert described recent CBA talks as "constructive" and ongoing, talking to press ahead of the All-Star Game. "I want a lot of the same things the players want," she said. "I'm still really optimistic that we'll get something done that will be transformational and next year at All-Star we'll be talking about how great everything is. Obviously, there's a lot of hard work to be done on both sides to get there." "We were at a very different place in 2020 than we are in 2025," Engelbert said of when the last CBA was reached. "I think you'll see the revenue-sharing be a much more lucrative one as we go forward because we're in a better place, quite frankly." WNBA players characterized the meeting as a "missed opportunity," hence their Saturday warmup shirts. The second half of the WNBA season resumes Tuesday, and players from the All-Star Game say they haven't decided if they'll wear the shirts on their own teams in the weeks ahead, the AP reports. Some players, including All-Stars Collier and Angel Reese, say they may stage a walkout if a new CBA is not reached by October. The WNBA did not respond to CNBC Make It's request for comment by time of publication. S