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College basketball phenom Caitlin Clark selected first in WNBA draft

NEW YORK – Caitlin Clark, who smashed records on and off the court in a dazzling US college career, was selected first in the WNBA draft on Monday (Tuesday Manila time) amid expectations she will have a transformative effect on women's professional basketball.

The Indiana Fever made it official, taking the 22-year-old Iowa Hawkeyes star with the first pick in front of a rapt crowd at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.

"I got a little anxious there before the pick," Clark said in an interview with broadcaster ESPN.

"I've dreamed of this moment since I was in second grade and it's taken a lot of hard work, a lot of ups and downs.

"I told my mom before this, you know, I earned it, and that's why I'm so proud of it."

The Fever won the 2012 WNBA crown but haven't been to the playoffs since 2016.

They had the second-lowest attendance in the league in 2023 with an average of 4,066 fans per game.

But with Clark on board alongside last year's overall top pick Aliyah Boston, in Indiana all that seems set to change.

In anticipation of her selection, the WNBA had already scheduled 36 of the Fever's 40 games next season for national television.

Even before the draft the Fever had begun selling a limited amount of single-game tickets, betting that the basketball-mad Midwestern state of Indiana would be prime territory for "Clark-mania."

Seats for games against Connecticut and Los Angeles sold out within hours of going on sale.

Everyone wants to see the two-time national player of the year, whose fame is built on a foundation of on-court excellence that saw her eclipse Pete Maravich's 54-year-old all-time college basketball scoring record.

Her remarkable long-range shooting prowess made for a stream of highlight-reel baskets. She averaged 31.6 points per game this season as she led Iowa to the NCAA championship game for a second straight year.

They were beaten both times, but thanks to Clark's impact the Hawkeyes set or broke attendance records in all but two of their games.

This month's title game, in which South Carolina vanquished Clark's Iowa, drew an average audience of 18.7 million viewers.

That made it the most watched women's basketball game in history and the most watched

Read more on philstar.com