Skip Bayless weighs in as Caitlin Clark battles with slump, injury, and sky-high expectations
Caitlin Clark is officially in the toughest shooting stretch of her young WNBA career. After torching the Liberty for a career-high 32 points on June 1—including a scorching 7-of-14 from three—she looked every bit the superstar she was projected to be. She followed that up by going 4-for-6 from deep against the Connecticut Sun. But then, the slump hit. Over her past three games, Clark has gone just 1-for-23 from beyond the arc. That’s no exaggeration—1 of 23. The noise has grown louder, and even one of her biggest longtime supporters couldn’t stay silent.
It just seems like great shooters like Caitlin Clark don’t go through this kind of slump. Even though it’s only three games, it’s just devastatingly wrong and bad. pic.twitter.com/ocxODZebJc
— Skip Bayless (@RealSkipBayless) June 28, 2025
Skip Bayless, who’s been singing Clark’s praises since her Iowa days, addressed her cold streak on Friday. “I’ve raved and raved and raved about her, but now I’ve got to be honest,” Bayless said. “She is officially into a deep, deep three-point shooting slump. It’s the worst three-point shooting stretch in WNBA history. She’s over three games, one for her last 23 from three. It’s just getting hard to watch.” And he backed it with numbers. Clark’s current three-point percentage sits at 29.5%, ranking her 55th among 61 qualified shooters in the league. She’s tied for the WNBA lead in assists per game (6.9), but also leads in turnovers—223 total, five more than Angel Reese, who’s second.
She’s also now missed two straight games with a left groin injury—first against the Sparks on Thursday and again Friday night versus Dallas. This comes just weeks after returning from a quad injury that sidelined her for five games. Head coach Stephanie White spoke on her status Thursday night: “I think it’s very much a day-to-day thing with how she responds to treatment… I stay in my lane and let our strength and conditioning and our athletic training staff do what they do best.” Bayless added, “It just seems like great shooters don’t go through these kind of prolonged slumps… I’m sure some of the veteran stars that have criticized her are shrugging and saying ‘told you,’ when they should be rooting like mad for her to snap out of her slump.”
Still, even in a slump, Clark’s impact on the Fever and the league can’t be denied. In just two WNBA seasons, she’s averaged 19.0 points, 8.5 assists, and 5.6 rebounds over 49 regular-season games. She’s already been named Rookie of the Year and selected for an All-Star Game. This stretch may be tough, but for a player already rewriting the record books, it’s just one chapter in a much bigger story.
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