INDIANAPOLIS — Sometimes, all it takes is a few minutes of grainy practice footage to completely upend the narrative of a franchise. For fans of the Indiana Fever, who have spent the season dissecting every possession and rotation, the latest clips emerging from the Team USA training camp didn’t just provide entertainment—they offered a revelation.
As Caitlin Clark took the floor alongside Las Vegas Aces star Jackie Young, something became immediately, undeniably clear: This is what basketball perfection looks like. The chemistry was instantaneous. The flow was seamless. And for those watching closely, it forced an uncomfortable but necessary comparison regarding the current roster construction of the Indiana Fever, specifically concerning the future of fan-favorite Kelsey Mitchell.

The “Scary” Evidence on Tape
Let’s strip away the hype and look at the basketball. The footage dropping from day two of training camp wasn’t just a highlight reel of made shots; it was a masterclass in basketball IQ. In one sequence, Clark grabs a defensive rebound. In most scenarios, this triggers a chaotic sprint. But with Young, it triggered a calculated assault. Clark pushed the ball, scanning the floor, while Young filled the lane with terrifying purpose. A swing to the corner, an open look—the process was flawless.
In another clip, the defense collapses on a driving Young. Without hesitation, she kicks it out to Clark for a rhythm three. It’s textbook “drive and kick,” but executed with a timing that usually takes years to develop. As one analyst noted, “They are carving it up like they’ve been playing together for years.”
This isn’t “garbage time” dominance against a scout team. This is against elite competition, including Kelsey Plum’s squad. The verdict from the film room is unanimous: The Clark-Young pairing creates a “pick your poison” scenario that leaves defenses helpless. If you collapse on Young, Clark kills you from deep. If you stick to Clark, Young’s 6-foot frame and downhill aggression destroy you at the rim.
The Great Debate: Speed vs. Tempo
To understand why this partnership pops so vividly on screen, we have to distinguish between two basketball concepts that are often conflated: Speed and Tempo.
Kelsey Mitchell, the current running mate for Clark in Indiana, possesses elite speed. She is a Ferrari in the open court, capable of blowing by defenders with straight-line acceleration that few in the WNBA can match. Mitchell is a scorer, a bucket-getter who has carried the Fever offense during its darkest years.

Jackie Young, however, masters tempo. Tempo is not just about how fast you run; it’s about the purposeful movement of the entire unit. It’s the ability to push the pace while maintaining complete cognitive control. Young understands when to speed up, when to slow down, and how to manipulate the defense’s spacing.
For a playmaker like Caitlin Clark, “tempo” is the love language of basketball. Clark thrives not just on fast breaks, but on smart breaks—quick decisions, rapid ball movement, and teammates who read the floor as quickly as she does. The footage shows Young speaking that same language. The offense doesn’t just run; it hums. It’s a “purposeful pace designed to create systematic advantages,” rather than the sometimes chaotic freneticism seen with the Fever.
The Elephant in the Room: Kelsey Mitchell’s Future
This leads us to the conversation that is making waves across social media. If Jackie Young represents the “perfect” prototype for a backcourt partner for Clark, where does that leave Kelsey Mitchell?
Let’s be absolutely clear: Kelsey Mitchell demands respect. She has been the loyal soldier for Indiana, staying true to the franchise through losing seasons and rebuilding years. She is a professional scorer who can create her own shot against anyone. Suggesting a change isn’t an insult to her talent; it’s an acknowledgement of fit.
The reality exposed by the Team USA tapes is that Young’s skillset—defensive versatility (guarding 1 through 3), size, and facilitation—maximizes Clark in a way Mitchell simply cannot. Young can run an offense, allowing Clark to work off-ball, and offers a defensive stoutness that covers for Clark’s limitations.
While Jackie Young is firmly under contract with the Las Vegas Aces (and the likelihood of her moving to Indiana is incredibly low), she represents the profile the Fever front office must target. The Fever don’t just need “good players.” They need players who unlock Caitlin Clark. As the footage proves, roster construction isn’t about collecting talent; it’s about identifying the specific skill sets that create synergy.
Busting the Drama Narratives
Beyond the tactical revelations, the training camp has also served as a massive reality check for the drama-hungry media. For months, headlines have tried to manufacture a bitter rivalry between Caitlin Clark and UConn star Paige Bueckers.
The reality? They are teammates. They are competitors. They are friends.
In the background of the shooting drills, you can hear Bueckers yelling “Buckets!” before Clark even releases the ball. It’s a small detail, but it speaks volumes. It shows a level of support and camaraderie that contradicts the “hateful rivals” narrative. Elite competitors go at each other’s throats during the game, but champions support each other when they are on the same side. The mutual respect is palpable.
Furthermore, Aaliyah Boston’s comments about trusting Clark to hit the big shots—referencing a potential game-winner for the World Cup—show that Clark’s teammates, both old and new, have absolute faith in her clutch gene.
The Defensive Double Standard
Finally, the tapes highlighted a frustrating double standard regarding defense. Critics love to dissect every missed rotation by Clark, labeling her a defensive liability. Yet, the footage shows Clark competing hard, moving her feet, and engaging. Is she an elite lockdown defender? No. But she is average, smart, and opportunistic.
Interestingly, Paige Bueckers shares a very similar defensive profile—high IQ, high effort, but lacking elite lateral quickness. Yet, when Bueckers gets beat off the dribble (as seen in a clip where Young scores easily on her), the “defensive liability” think-pieces are nowhere to be found. The scrutiny Clark faces is unique, but the film shows she holds her own just as well as her peers.
The Blueprint for a Dynasty
The Team USA training camp footage is more than just offseason content; it is a blueprint. It shows what is possible when Caitlin Clark is surrounded by high-IQ, versatile players who understand tempo.
Whether it’s the lethal “pick your poison” offense with Jackie Young, or the supportive, high-level competition with Paige Bueckers, the future of women’s basketball is dazzlingly bright. For the Indiana Fever, the assignment is now clear. They have seen the prototype. They know what “perfect” looks like. The question now is whether they have the courage to make the hard roster decisions—potentially involving beloved veterans—to build a true dynasty around their generational superstar.
The chemistry is undeniable. The tape doesn’t lie. And for the rest of the WNBA, that is a truly terrifying thought.
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