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Wilson, Clark give WNBA weekly honors star power
Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

The WNBA’s latest weekly honors carried a familiar kind of star power.

A’ja Wilson and Caitlin Clark were named Players of the Week on Tuesday, giving the Commissioner’s Cup stretch one of its cleanest headline pairings. Wilson earned the Western Conference honor, while Clark took the Eastern Conference award.

The numbers made both choices easy.

Wilson averaged 30 points, nine rebounds and 2.7 blocks for the Las Vegas Aces. Clark averaged 25.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 6.7 assists for the Indiana Fever.

Wilson’s standard

For Wilson, the honor was another reminder of the level she has set for Las Vegas.

The timing came one day after the Aces took a 96-66 loss to the Dallas Wings, tying their lowest scoring output of the season. Still, that result did not erase the week Wilson had before it.

Wilson powered Las Vegas through its winning streak with the same mix that has defined her season. She scored, controlled the glass and protected the rim. Even when the Aces had different players step forward, Wilson remained the center of their identity.

That is what made the award matter. It was not just about volume scoring. It reflected the way Wilson continues to shape games on both ends.

Clark’s control

Clark’s honor came from a different kind of pressure.

Her scoring stood out, but the assists mattered just as much. Averaging 6.7 assists showed the same thing that has made Clark one of the league’s most watched players: she is not only creating shots for herself. She is bending defenses and turning attention into chances for others.

That combination is what makes her weekly line so complete.

Clark gave the Fever scoring punch, but she also gave them structure. In a league where defenses load up on stars quickly, that balance matters.

Bigger than the graphic

The pairing also gave the league a strong weekly snapshot.

Wilson represents the established standard, a two-way force still carrying the Aces’ highest expectations. Clark represents the present and future pull of the league, a guard whose range and playmaking continue to travel beyond the box score.

Together, the honors gave the Commissioner’s Cup window a clean basketball story. One award went to dominance in the West. The other went to creation in the East.

For Las Vegas, Wilson’s recognition is both a reward and a reminder. The Aces still have to respond after Dallas, but their standard remains clear.

It still starts with No. 22.

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This article first appeared on Dice City Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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