WNBA

Fever’s Clark sounds off on non-call in loss to Valkyries: ‘The ref can’t miss that’

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INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JULY 15: Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) is upset at a referee for not calling a foul when she took a shot against the Golden State Valkyries on July 15, 2026, at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) (Icon Sportswire/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

INDIANAPOLIS -- Frustrated by a non-call midway through the second quarter of the Indiana Fever's 88-75 loss to the Golden State Valkyries on Wednesday night, Caitlin Clark threw a fist in the air and made a beeline toward an official.

Clark had been driving to the basket for a layup and hit the floor after contact with Kiah Stokes. The basket was good, but she didn't get a foul call. Clark limped back to the defensive end, and as soon as play was stopped by the next whistle, she immediately turned toward the official who was near on the other end of the court.

"The ref can't miss that ... then I have to play with a contusion in my leg the rest of the game," Clark said afterward. "It's ridiculous. ... [The ref] said I initiated the contact. Which is fine, but you can't knee me in the leg. Knock me over."

As frustrated as Clark was with the non-call, she didn't seem to be worried about her leg.

"Ah, we'll just rub it out," Clark said with a smile. "Good old knuckles on it and call it a day."

Fever coach Stephanie White added with a touch of sarcasm, "They said Caitlin initiated the contact. That's all they said. She seems to always be initiating the contact. I'm trying to not get fined. Again, all I'll say is that we just keep asking for consistency."

Every time the three-time All-Star hits the floor, there's concern from Fever fans. Clark sat out three of the past six games and has been on a minutes restriction in the other three because of a back injury.

Before the game, Clark said she felt good but wasn't sure what her status would be for an upcoming back-to-back Friday and Saturday against the Seattle Storm and New York Liberty. Still, she hasn't been as effective as usual, shooting 35% from the field and 16% from beyond the arc in her past three games.

Clark finished with 13 points, six assists and three rebounds in 26 minutes Wednesday, shooting 4-for-14 from the field and 1-for-8 on 3-pointers. Kelsey Mitchell scored a game-high 20 points for the Fever and Aliyah Boston had 15 points and seven rebounds.

"They're in my grill," Clark said of the Valkyries. "They're probably the best defensive team in the league. They're really good at that. I thought I finally played with a little more pace and a little bit more burst, especially down the stretch in the fourth."

That defense has fueled Golden State to eight consecutive wins -- the longest active win streak in the league and tied with the Minnesota Lynx and Liberty for the longest this season. It was the Valkyries' 11th win by double digits, the most of any team in 2026.

Six players scored in double figures for Golden State. All-Star starter Gabby Williams scored 16 and Kaitlyn Chen had for 14 points off the bench.

"We've got to be the only team that has like multiple six player of the year options," Williams said. "It's insane."

Coach Natalie Nakase added, "I think they'd rather see success in the team more than themselves."

The Valkyries have held opponents to 75 points or fewer 12 times this season and they're 11-1 in those games. That's the most in the league and double the next closest teams -- the Lynx, Phoenix Mercury and Washington Mystics have six apiece.

Still, Nakase wasn't overly thrilled.

"We're really trying to prepare down the line," Nakase said. "We have to get better.

"We did not do the defensive game plan, so we have a lot to get better at rather than looking at a streak right now."