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Indiana Fever plan to make a shocking decision about Caitlin Clark, says Klay Thompson’s father

Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
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Mychal Thompson has thrown a huge Caitlin Clark claim into the WNBA conversation, saying he has heard the Indiana Fever may no longer want their franchise star.

The claim is explosive because Clark remains the center of Indiana’s future and one of the biggest draws in the league. That is why any suggestion of the Fever moving away from her was always going to spark immediate attention.

There is no confirmed indication that Indiana plans to trade Clark, but Thompson’s post still created noise because of how direct it was.

Mychal Thompson, color analyst, works the Prime Ticket television broadcast of the game between the Saint Mary's Gaels and the Pepperdine Waves on January 8, 2011 at Firestone Fieldhouse.
Photo by Jeff Golden/Getty Images

Mychal Thompson on X made a stunning Caitlin Clark claim on X, urging the Los Angeles Sparks to act if the Indiana Fever were really prepared to move away from her.

“I’m hearing from a reliable source the Fever don’t want Caitlin no more…SPARKS…Go get her…NOW!!!” Thompson tweeted.

The line was designed to travel quickly. Thompson, Klay Thompson’s father and a longtime basketball voice in Los Angeles, did not soften the claim or present it as casual fan talk.

That does not make it confirmed. Clark is still the Fever’s most important player, and the idea of Indiana willingly moving on from her would be one of the most shocking decisions in WNBA history.

Caitlin Clark trade talk puts Indiana Fever and Los Angeles Sparks in focus

The timing of Thompson’s post helped it gain attention. Indiana has dealt with early-season pressure, public scrutiny around Stephanie White, and constant reaction to every Clark moment.

Clark also just helped the Fever beat the Atlanta Dream 83-71, finishing with 17 points, 8 assists, and 7 rebounds. That kind of performance shows why the Fever would have every reason to keep building around her rather than consider anything drastic.

For the Sparks, the fantasy is obvious. Clark in Los Angeles would instantly transform the franchise’s visibility, ticket demand, and national profile, which is why Thompson pushed the idea so forcefully.

Still, this remains rumor territory unless the Fever show otherwise. Thompson’s post created a headline, but Indiana’s basketball logic still points toward Clark being the player the entire franchise is built around.