
USA Today via Reuters
Jul 20, 2024; Phoenix, AZ, USA; Team WNBA guard Caitlin Clark (22) dribbles against USA Women’s National Team during the WNBA All Star Game at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

USA Today via Reuters
Jul 20, 2024; Phoenix, AZ, USA; Team WNBA guard Caitlin Clark (22) dribbles against USA Women’s National Team during the WNBA All Star Game at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports
Something feels off in Indiana. It’s not just the scoreboard, or the missed shots, or even the string of blowout losses. It’s bigger than that. There’s a storm brewing inside Gainbridge Fieldhouse, and it’s not coming from the opposing bench. Something about the way the team is using Caitlin Clark has fans throwing up their hands in frustration, wondering out loud what on earth is going on!
The fans did not tune in for this player. The same Caitlin who was torching defenses with logo threes and turning college games into prime-time TV is now mostly stationed off the ball, floating through possessions while the offense grinds into something… unrecognizable. As per recent chatter, this mounting discontent boiled over after Caitlin Clark’s tough return from injury, marked by an 80-61 blowout loss to the Valkyries.
She struggled to find rhythm, finishing 4-for-12 from the field, as the Fever stumbled through what looked like a mismatched, outdated game plan. Clark even admitted post-game that the team lacked execution. “We weren’t playing how we were supposed to,” she said. The fans? They were louder. X lit up with takes slamming the system, the coaching decisions, and most of all, the misuse of Clark.
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Dig a little deeper, and the frustration starts to make more sense. Coach Stephanie White’s post-game criticism hinted at a deeper problem: “Our attention to details was poor.” But it wasn’t just a matter of execution. Clark, known for her elite court vision and ability to control tempo, was largely off the ball. Her 8.6 assists per game? Not enough when you’re sidelining her most valuable skill set. The result? Disjointed plays, poor spacing, and a team that looked lost more often than not. Especially considering Clark’s 17.4 points and 5 rebounds a night, fans can’t wrap their heads around why she isn’t more central.
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Jun 19, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) talks to media members before the game against the Golden State Valkyries at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images
The questions are starting to pile up, and they all come back to one big one: If you have Caitlin Clark, why aren’t you letting her play? That very question is at the heart of a growing online movement of fans demanding a change in how Indiana uses their star. And they’re not exactly whispering it.
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Fans sound off on Fever’s game plan: “LET CC BE CC”
One of the loudest messages came in the form of a plea, more than a rant. “Not one key to the game has anything to do with playing fast and up tempo… She is the engine on and off the court. Act like it.” That sentiment reverberated across fan circles. Clark didn’t just boost ticket sales; she resurrected national interest in the sport. Many feel the team should tailor the system around her rather than box her into a scheme that saps her spark. Echoing that, another fan nailed the feeling in just six words: “LET CC BE A POINT GUARD.”
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Should the Fever let Caitlin Clark run the show to reignite their game and fanbase?
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Then came the now-iconic cry that has taken over timelines. “LET CC BE CC!” It’s more than a slogan. It’s a demand for the Fever to stop micromanaging one of the most electrifying playmakers in the game and let her lead. It hit home because it was simple, honest, and dead right. One other frustrated fan brought bluntness to the table with a take that stung because of its accuracy: “Free Caitlin and stop running this lame a-s, outdated offense.”
Fans are done with the slow pace and the old-school sets. They want the modern magic back, and for that, White needs to let Clark take as many shots as possible. For instance, in the game against the Valkyries, when the Fever was down double digits late, the ball should have reached Clark and stayed there. Instead, CC was sharing the ball too often.
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And the conversation didn’t stop there. Another supporter practically drafted a new playbook, saying Clark should “run the offense, get out and run, set better screens, space the floor, play hard.” These aren’t just complaints. They’re roadmaps. Fans are offering up the solutions they want to see, and they’re fed up with the HC ignoring them. It’s not just about one player anymore. It’s about the direction of a team that has the keys to the kingdom and can’t seem to find the ignition.
The uproar isn’t just noise. It’s a reflection of how much Caitlin Clark means to fans and how quickly they’ve embraced her as the face of the WNBA. The Fever has a generational star on their hands. The fans know it. The league knows it. Now it’s up to the team to start acting like it. What do you think?
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Should the Fever let Caitlin Clark run the show to reignite their game and fanbase?