

The Indiana Fever’s roster is in crisis mode, and their next matchup couldn’t come at a tougher time. Caitlin Clark will sit out her 10th straight game Saturday against the Chicago Sky, still recovering from a stubborn right groin injury. To make matters worse, Indiana learned on Friday that Aari McDonald and Sydney Colson are both done for the season after injuries suffered in Thursday’s blowout loss to thePhoenix Mercury.
That leaves the Fever without a single healthy true point guard in a key rivalry game. Coach Christie Sides will be relying on makeshift ball-handling options just to get the offense moving. It’s a massive adjustment for a team that had already been struggling to find its rhythm without its star player.
Caitlin Clark praises coach Bluder’s practice style that still shapes her pro game
But the conversation around Clark isn’t just about her recovery timeline anymore. On his show this week, Skip Bayless went all in on a theory that the WNBA and the Fever might not be telling the whole truth about her injury. “Is it possible she tore her groin so badly that she’s already been privately ruled out for the rest of the season, yet the league wants to keep fans in the dark?”Bayless said.
A Season Derailed by Soft-Tissue Setbacks
Clark’s absence has been part of a frustrating pattern. Since May, she’s dealt with four separate soft-tissue injuries: two quad issues, a left groin strain that cost her the Commissioner’s Cup final, and now the right groin problem that has sidelined her since July 15. In total, she’s missed 18 of Indiana’s 31 regular-season games.
The Fever have been quiet about when she might return, and Clark herself hasn’t given much away. Speaking with Sue Bird on the “Bird’s Eye View” podcast, she admitted the downtime has been “really frustrating” and that she’s just trying to trust the process.
Without Clark, Indiana has leaned heavily on Aliyah Boston and a rotating cast of midseason signings. They’ve managed to stay in the playoff picture, but the strain is clear – especially now that two more guards are done for the year.
Bayless’ comments might be pure speculation, but they tap into a growing unease among fans. For a player as marketable – and as central to the league’s ratings – as Caitlin Clark, the lack of transparency is bound to fuel more questions. Whether she’s weeks away or finished for the season, the Fever’s playoff push now feels like it’s running on borrowed time.
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