Fever get taste of winning — it tastes like champagne. Now they hope Commissioner's Cup title is 'turning point'
The Indiana Fever guard emerged from the visitors' locker room mostly dry, the only evidence of the celebration raging behind her being the drops of champagne on her oversized ski goggles and the shoulders of her Commissioner's Cup champion T-shirt.
"Caitlin Clark's in there, biting all the bottles for everybody — biting through cans and (stuff), but it was fun," Colson said of the scene inside the victorious room. "I'm not a drinker, I don't know how to do champagne celebrations, but they were opening them; the coaches were having a good time chugging out of the Commissioner's Cup — it was fun. It was a good time."
The Fever signed Colson, in part, for moments like this. A 10-year veteran and two-time WNBA champion, she brings the experience and winning pedigree often necessary to help elevate building teams like Indiana to that next level. And though Tuesday's 74-59 win over the Minnesota Lynx was not for the ultimate prize, it was an elimination game on the road against the league's best team; the closest approximation to a playoff game this team will experience until the fall.
"I made it clear (before the game) we need to have a turning point in our season," Colson said.
"We're trying to find our identity," she continued, citing the team's inconsistencies from game to game. "I said, no one's expecting us to win, so we're going to be able to play free. Let's go out there, execute on both ends and have confidence, believe we can do this on their home court. And I think we all played like we knew we could. Hopefully this mentality carries."
As Colson continued fielding questions, three of her teammates — Clark, Sophie Cunningham and Lexie Hull — set a trap for her inside the locker room entrance, occasionally peeking out to make sure she hadn't gotten away.
What are you doing with your share of the $500,000 prize pool for winning the Commissioner's Cup?
"Oh my God, you're so nosy," Colson joked.
And with that, she turned heel and returned to the locker room … where she was immediately ambushed by Clark, Cunningham and Hull, the three spraying her with champagne, then emptying their bottles over her head.
"We love you, Syd!" Cunningham called out as she shook out the final drops of alcohol.
"It's fun," Hull said of the celebration. "We worked really hard to get here and I'm happy we're able to celebrate that win together in a room like that."
Those scenes and emotions inside the visitors' locker room were certainly well-deserved.
Staring down a Western Conference behemoth in the Lynx and without Clark for a third consecutive game, the Fever shook off a wobbly first quarter to put together their most complete performance of the season and in doing so, secured their most impressive win of the year.
The defense looked a step slow in the first quarter, struggling to keep up with a Minnesota offense that created traffic with a series of screens and player movement on each possession to find (or create) an open look. It was artistry in motion and snowballed into a 13-point lead with 8:13 left in the second quarter.
The Fever (8-8) did not allow another basket until the opening seconds of the third.
"We were more disruptive. We were in passing lanes. We didn't allow them to just pass the ball (and) we made their movement a little more difficult," coach Stephanie White said in her postgame news conference. "We made their movement a little more difficult, because of our positioning. Our point of attack on ball screen defense was better."
The Fever's intensity was better, as was their attention to detail, White continued.
Everyone was flying around and they were helping each other on the defensive side, Hull added. The Lynx would try their slips and rolls and the Fever had someone there, ready to intercept.
Minnesota (14-2) entered Tuesday averaging 85.3 points and shooting 47% from the field. It struggled to reach its season-low 59 points against Indiana and shot a woeful 34.9%.
"It's what we're capable of doing and we did it consistently for three quarters," White said. "That's what it's going to take for us."
The offense did what it's done all season, particularly over this most recent stretch, with a variety of players stepping up in the absence of Clark. Aliyah Boston collected 12 points, 11 rebounds and six assists, Sophie Cunningham tallied 13 points and seven rebounds, and Kelsey Mitchell and Aari McDonald dropped a dozen points apiece.
But how about Natasha Howard? Another offseason addition who brings that winning pedigree — she won two conference championships and a WNBA title in her two seasons in Minnesota (2016-17) — she earned game MVP honors after contributing 16 points on 4-of-10 shooting (8-for-8 free throws), 12 rebounds, four assists and two steals.
Howard kickstarted the Fever offense in the second quarter, ending a four-and-a-half-minute scoring drought with a couple assists, then helped the visitors maintain control through the third, totaling 10 points on 4-of-5 shooting as the margin reached as many as 14.
Of note, Howard scored 13 points vs. Los Angeles two games ago, then went for 15 points, 13 rebounds, four assists and three steals last week vs. Dallas.
"Tash flies under the radar," Mitchell said. "Not a lot of people respect what she does and brings to the table. She's won at every level and I think we have to give her flowers a little bit more."
"We did whatever we needed to do to make the play down the stretch tonight, and down the stretch, that was with Tash. It was her game and it was our role to make sure she got what she needed."
Most important to Tuesday's win, the Fever finally displayed that killer instinct, refusing to allow Minnesota even the opportunity to get back into the game.
The Target Center crowd roared back to life as the home team clawed back to within seven and forced a timeout early in the fourth quarter. Indiana retaliated immediately with two baskets by Boston and another by McDonald.
"We've run into some fourth quarters where we're ahead then we let the other team crawl back into it," Hull said. "We've worked in practice, going over that situation and making sure we're not playing not to lose and are instead continuing to build on that lead."
The Lynx used last year's Commissioner's Cup championship run as a launching point for their season, the foundation of belief for that group on their way to another conference championship.
Now the Fever have the same opportunity.
"We need this mindset to fuel us forward," Colson said. "The rankings will take care of themselves. We know we're a capable team, we just have to show it consistently."
Get IndyStar's Indiana Fever and Caitlin Clark coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Caitlin Clark Fever newsletter.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Fever celebrate Commissioner's Cup win, hope it's turning point to season
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ledecky reigns over McIntosh as record-breaking US hit back at critics
Katie Ledecky beat Summer McIntosh to win an epic 800m freestyle world title in Singapore on Saturday as the record-breaking United States hit back at their critics. On a Super Saturday for the embattled Americans, who have been struggling with illness in Singapore, Ledecky won her seventh career world gold in the event she has made her own. But the legendary American was challenged like never before, touching the wall in a championship-record 8min 05.62sec -- a fingertip ahead of Australia's Lani Pallister (8:05.98) and McIntosh (8:07.29). It was Canadian sensation McIntosh's first defeat of the championships and ended her bid to match Michael Phelps as the only swimmer ever to win five individual golds at a single world championships. The 18-year-old has already won three golds this week in Singapore. Ledecky, 28, had too much staying power for her younger rival, with Pallister also in gold-medal contention until the final lunge for the line. "They pushed me all the way," said Ledecky, a four-time Olympic champion in the event. "I'm just really happy I could put that together. I just kept telling myself to trust my legs." The United States team, under the cosh after criticism from Olympic greats Phelps and Ryan Lochte, won three golds on the penultimate day of competition. They lead the medals table from Australia with eight golds following victories on Saturday from Ledecky, Gretchen Walsh and their mixed 4x100m freestyle relay team -- the latter in a world record time. A newly fit and firing Walsh completed a butterfly double, romping to victory in the 50m. The American, who won the 100m butterfly earlier in the week, touched the wall in 24.83sec, beating Australia's Alexandria Perkins (25.31) and Belgium's Roos Vanotterdijk (25.43). Walsh said she felt "fragile" before her 100m win after going down with a stomach bug that has swept through the American camp -- and triggered questions from Phelps and Lochte about the management of the team. She was back to full strength for the fast and furious 50m, which will become an Olympic event for the first time at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. "I'm very proud," said the 22-year-old, calling it a "rocky" competition for her despite the double success. She labelled the criticism from Phelps and Lochte "frustrating". To cap off a golden day for the Americans, they took gold in 3:18.48sec in the relay, beating Australia's previous leading time of 3:18.83 set in 2023. - Aussie double delight - Australia won two golds on the night to add to their haul of seven golds overall. New father Cam McEvoy powered to the men's 50m freestyle gold to go with his Paris Olympics crown and Kaylee McKeown embellished her dominance in the women's backstroke. The 31-year-old McEvoy -- who is at his seventh world championships -- reclaimed the title he won in 2023 after turning on the afterburners in the second half of the sprint to win in a sizzling 21.14sec. Britain's Ben Proud took silver in 21.26, with Jack Alexy of the United States in bronze in 21.46. McKeown added the 200m backstroke crown to her 100m title. McKeown again got the better of Regan Smith, touching the wall in a championships-record 2:03.33 to beat her American arch-rival into second place in 2:04.29. McKeown also won the 100-200 backstroke double at the Tokyo and Paris Olympics. France's Maxime Grousset also sealed a Singapore individual double with a rampant victory in the men's 100m butterfly, to complement his 50m gold. Grousset's time of 49.62sec was the third-fastest ever. pst/lb
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Washington Commanders training camp report: Live updates from Day 8
After a walkthrough on Friday, the Washington Commanders are back on the field Saturday for Day 8 of training camp. It's an unofficial Day 8 as the Commanders have held walkthroughs when camp was closed to the media and the fans. Washington is scheduled for a scrimmage with the New England Patriots on Wednesday on the grass fields behind Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The Commanders will then play the Patriots on Friday in the preseason opener for both teams. It will be the first NFL meeting between the quarterbacks taken No. 2 (Jayden Daniels) and No. (Drake Maye) overall in the 2024 NFL draft. So, what will Saturday bring? Dan Quinn pre-practice press conference. Roster move official Day 3 of pads First to arrive is Deatrich Wise — again Cool sign DQ on Terry McLaurin holdout QBs and WRs This article originally appeared on Commanders Wire: Commanders training camp report: Live updates from Day 8
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Brewers' Andrew Vaughn on 229-RBI pace in Milwaukee
Andrew Vaughn has been born again in Milwaukee. After being an utter disappointment in his Chicago White Sox career, he looks like the best hitter on the planet with the Brewers. Maybe the best way to sum it up comes from White Sox stats expert Jay Cuda on X. He points out that Vaughn, if he played a full season with the Brewers at this pace, would end up with 58 home runs and 229 RBI. Check out this comparison: MORE: Guardians' Jose Ramirez is 1st MLB third baseman in history with this amazing record It's crazy that every one of Vaughn's counting stats is already ahead of his White Sox numbers in just a third of the games. It's also just something that no one could've seen coming. Vaughn was the No. 3 overall pick in 2019 by the White Sox in the draft out of Cal. In five seasons in Chicago at the MLB level, Vaughn had a negative Wins Above Replacement number. He played more than 600 games with the White Sox and hardly ever looked like an average, let alone above-average, MLB player. But in Milwaukee, he's on fire and can't slow down. MORE: Oneil Cruz makes one of the best throws in MLB history He even recently tied a Barry Bonds record, becoming the second-player ever with a .475 average, 1.000 slugging percentage and 15 RBI in his first 10 home games with a new team. The Brewers only had to trade away struggling pitcher Aaron Civale to get Vaughn. And it looks brilliant so far. Vaughn seems like he has to slow down at some point. After all, no one has ever had 229 RBI in a full season, so that pace is a bit much. But it seems like something has been unlocked, whether it's mechanical or just good vibes. The Brewers will happily take it, and so will Vaughn. MORE MLB NEWS: Blue Jays' Shane Bieber trade takes big injury risk Steven Kwan shows kindness on the most stressful day of his MLB career Twins' Carlos Correa is shock end to $200 million era Angels' new trade pickup is not a fan of California Mariners' Eugenio Suarez trade rectifies a $15 million mistake Red Sox phenom Roman Anthony makes MLB history not done since Elmer Valo in 1940