×
Deadspin | With Mickey Moniak sparkling, Colorado out to rock Astros again    Apr 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies right fielder Mickey Moniak (22) rounds the bases on a solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images   Mickey Moniak struggled at the start of the 2025 season, hitting .216 through the end of May, but he recovered to hit .270 with a career-high 24 home runs in his first season with the Colorado Rockies.  He signed for another year and is off to a better start after beginning the season on the injured list. The former No. 1 overall draft pick has two home runs in four games this year and will look to keep the momentum going when the Rockies face the Houston Astros on Tuesday night in Denver in the second of a three-game series.  The Rockies used an eight-run fifth inning to win the opener 9-7 on Monday night.  Moniak, who had one hit Monday and is batting .286 so far, made his season debut in Colorado’s home opener against Philadelphia on Friday with one hit but broke out Sunday with two home runs, one into the second deck and the other off the facing of the second level.   He hit just five homers through the first two-plus months of 2025 before countering with six in June and September and five in August.  “If you look at last year, the first two months weren’t the best,” Moniak said. “Then from June on, I felt I really unlocked something. There are obviously differences in playing at altitude versus sea level. The ball does different things. But from June on, I unlocked something in my swing where I go up to the plate and feel comfortable, feel I can do damage.”  Colorado will send left-hander Kyle Freeland (0-1, 2.89 ERA) against Houston right-hander Mike Burrows (1-1, 5.91) in Game 2 of the series.  Freeland has been solid in his first two starts but hasn’t gotten run support. He lost 2-1 to the Miami Marlins on March 27, then gave up just one run to the Toronto Blue Jays last Wednesday. He was long gone from the game by the time his teammates took a 2-1 win in 10 innings.  Freeland will make his fifth career start against the Astros. He is 0-2 with a 4.44 ERA in the previous four.   Burrows’ only outing against the Rockies was on Aug. 23, 2025, in Colorado when he pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He didn’t give up a run in four innings but didn’t factor into the Rockies’ 5-1 win.  He struggled in his first outing this season, giving up five runs on nine hits over 5 2/3 innings against the Los Angeles Angels and taking the 6-2 loss on March 27. He pitched better in a 6-4 win over Boston on Wednesday, allowing two runs in five innings.  Houston bounced back from dropping its first two games of the season to win six of seven but has lost its past two. Carlos Correa, back with the Astros for his first full season after three-plus years in Minnesota, has been a catalyst during the recent surge.  He had two hits in a 12-10, 10-inning loss at the Athletics on Sunday and doubled home Houston’s first run and scored the second Monday night. Correa, who went seven straight seasons without a stolen base while battling foot injuries, swiped one Sunday.  It was his first straight steal since the 2019 season.  “Don’t get used to it,” Correa, 31, said Sunday afternoon. “I just felt good today. Felt young.  “There’s going to be some chances out there with some (pitchers) that don’t pay attention to runners, so I feel like the team should take advantage of that. Mostly the young guys.”  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Mickey #Moniak #sparkling #Colorado #rock #Astros

Deadspin | With Mickey Moniak sparkling, Colorado out to rock Astros again
Deadspin | With Mickey Moniak sparkling, Colorado out to rock Astros again    Apr 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies right fielder Mickey Moniak (22) rounds the bases on a solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images   Mickey Moniak struggled at the start of the 2025 season, hitting .216 through the end of May, but he recovered to hit .270 with a career-high 24 home runs in his first season with the Colorado Rockies.  He signed for another year and is off to a better start after beginning the season on the injured list. The former No. 1 overall draft pick has two home runs in four games this year and will look to keep the momentum going when the Rockies face the Houston Astros on Tuesday night in Denver in the second of a three-game series.  The Rockies used an eight-run fifth inning to win the opener 9-7 on Monday night.  Moniak, who had one hit Monday and is batting .286 so far, made his season debut in Colorado’s home opener against Philadelphia on Friday with one hit but broke out Sunday with two home runs, one into the second deck and the other off the facing of the second level.   He hit just five homers through the first two-plus months of 2025 before countering with six in June and September and five in August.  “If you look at last year, the first two months weren’t the best,” Moniak said. “Then from June on, I felt I really unlocked something. There are obviously differences in playing at altitude versus sea level. The ball does different things. But from June on, I unlocked something in my swing where I go up to the plate and feel comfortable, feel I can do damage.”  Colorado will send left-hander Kyle Freeland (0-1, 2.89 ERA) against Houston right-hander Mike Burrows (1-1, 5.91) in Game 2 of the series.  Freeland has been solid in his first two starts but hasn’t gotten run support. He lost 2-1 to the Miami Marlins on March 27, then gave up just one run to the Toronto Blue Jays last Wednesday. He was long gone from the game by the time his teammates took a 2-1 win in 10 innings.  Freeland will make his fifth career start against the Astros. He is 0-2 with a 4.44 ERA in the previous four.   Burrows’ only outing against the Rockies was on Aug. 23, 2025, in Colorado when he pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He didn’t give up a run in four innings but didn’t factor into the Rockies’ 5-1 win.  He struggled in his first outing this season, giving up five runs on nine hits over 5 2/3 innings against the Los Angeles Angels and taking the 6-2 loss on March 27. He pitched better in a 6-4 win over Boston on Wednesday, allowing two runs in five innings.  Houston bounced back from dropping its first two games of the season to win six of seven but has lost its past two. Carlos Correa, back with the Astros for his first full season after three-plus years in Minnesota, has been a catalyst during the recent surge.  He had two hits in a 12-10, 10-inning loss at the Athletics on Sunday and doubled home Houston’s first run and scored the second Monday night. Correa, who went seven straight seasons without a stolen base while battling foot injuries, swiped one Sunday.  It was his first straight steal since the 2019 season.  “Don’t get used to it,” Correa, 31, said Sunday afternoon. “I just felt good today. Felt young.  “There’s going to be some chances out there with some (pitchers) that don’t pay attention to runners, so I feel like the team should take advantage of that. Mostly the young guys.”  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Mickey #Moniak #sparkling #Colorado #rock #AstrosApr 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies right fielder Mickey Moniak (22) rounds the bases on a solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Mickey Moniak struggled at the start of the 2025 season, hitting .216 through the end of May, but he recovered to hit .270 with a career-high 24 home runs in his first season with the Colorado Rockies.

He signed for another year and is off to a better start after beginning the season on the injured list. The former No. 1 overall draft pick has two home runs in four games this year and will look to keep the momentum going when the Rockies face the Houston Astros on Tuesday night in Denver in the second of a three-game series.

The Rockies used an eight-run fifth inning to win the opener 9-7 on Monday night.

Moniak, who had one hit Monday and is batting .286 so far, made his season debut in Colorado’s home opener against Philadelphia on Friday with one hit but broke out Sunday with two home runs, one into the second deck and the other off the facing of the second level.

He hit just five homers through the first two-plus months of 2025 before countering with six in June and September and five in August.

“If you look at last year, the first two months weren’t the best,” Moniak said. “Then from June on, I felt I really unlocked something. There are obviously differences in playing at altitude versus sea level. The ball does different things. But from June on, I unlocked something in my swing where I go up to the plate and feel comfortable, feel I can do damage.”

Colorado will send left-hander Kyle Freeland (0-1, 2.89 ERA) against Houston right-hander Mike Burrows (1-1, 5.91) in Game 2 of the series.

Freeland has been solid in his first two starts but hasn’t gotten run support. He lost 2-1 to the Miami Marlins on March 27, then gave up just one run to the Toronto Blue Jays last Wednesday. He was long gone from the game by the time his teammates took a 2-1 win in 10 innings.


Freeland will make his fifth career start against the Astros. He is 0-2 with a 4.44 ERA in the previous four.

Burrows’ only outing against the Rockies was on Aug. 23, 2025, in Colorado when he pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He didn’t give up a run in four innings but didn’t factor into the Rockies’ 5-1 win.

He struggled in his first outing this season, giving up five runs on nine hits over 5 2/3 innings against the Los Angeles Angels and taking the 6-2 loss on March 27. He pitched better in a 6-4 win over Boston on Wednesday, allowing two runs in five innings.

Houston bounced back from dropping its first two games of the season to win six of seven but has lost its past two. Carlos Correa, back with the Astros for his first full season after three-plus years in Minnesota, has been a catalyst during the recent surge.

He had two hits in a 12-10, 10-inning loss at the Athletics on Sunday and doubled home Houston’s first run and scored the second Monday night. Correa, who went seven straight seasons without a stolen base while battling foot injuries, swiped one Sunday.

It was his first straight steal since the 2019 season.

“Don’t get used to it,” Correa, 31, said Sunday afternoon. “I just felt good today. Felt young.

“There’s going to be some chances out there with some (pitchers) that don’t pay attention to runners, so I feel like the team should take advantage of that. Mostly the young guys.”

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Mickey #Moniak #sparkling #Colorado #rock #Astros

Apr 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies right fielder Mickey Moniak (22) rounds the bases on a solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Mickey Moniak struggled at the start of the 2025 season, hitting .216 through the end of May, but he recovered to hit .270 with a career-high 24 home runs in his first season with the Colorado Rockies.

He signed for another year and is off to a better start after beginning the season on the injured list. The former No. 1 overall draft pick has two home runs in four games this year and will look to keep the momentum going when the Rockies face the Houston Astros on Tuesday night in Denver in the second of a three-game series.

The Rockies used an eight-run fifth inning to win the opener 9-7 on Monday night.

Moniak, who had one hit Monday and is batting .286 so far, made his season debut in Colorado’s home opener against Philadelphia on Friday with one hit but broke out Sunday with two home runs, one into the second deck and the other off the facing of the second level.

He hit just five homers through the first two-plus months of 2025 before countering with six in June and September and five in August.

“If you look at last year, the first two months weren’t the best,” Moniak said. “Then from June on, I felt I really unlocked something. There are obviously differences in playing at altitude versus sea level. The ball does different things. But from June on, I unlocked something in my swing where I go up to the plate and feel comfortable, feel I can do damage.”

Colorado will send left-hander Kyle Freeland (0-1, 2.89 ERA) against Houston right-hander Mike Burrows (1-1, 5.91) in Game 2 of the series.

Freeland has been solid in his first two starts but hasn’t gotten run support. He lost 2-1 to the Miami Marlins on March 27, then gave up just one run to the Toronto Blue Jays last Wednesday. He was long gone from the game by the time his teammates took a 2-1 win in 10 innings.

Freeland will make his fifth career start against the Astros. He is 0-2 with a 4.44 ERA in the previous four.

Burrows’ only outing against the Rockies was on Aug. 23, 2025, in Colorado when he pitched for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He didn’t give up a run in four innings but didn’t factor into the Rockies’ 5-1 win.

He struggled in his first outing this season, giving up five runs on nine hits over 5 2/3 innings against the Los Angeles Angels and taking the 6-2 loss on March 27. He pitched better in a 6-4 win over Boston on Wednesday, allowing two runs in five innings.

Houston bounced back from dropping its first two games of the season to win six of seven but has lost its past two. Carlos Correa, back with the Astros for his first full season after three-plus years in Minnesota, has been a catalyst during the recent surge.

He had two hits in a 12-10, 10-inning loss at the Athletics on Sunday and doubled home Houston’s first run and scored the second Monday night. Correa, who went seven straight seasons without a stolen base while battling foot injuries, swiped one Sunday.

It was his first straight steal since the 2019 season.

“Don’t get used to it,” Correa, 31, said Sunday afternoon. “I just felt good today. Felt young.

“There’s going to be some chances out there with some (pitchers) that don’t pay attention to runners, so I feel like the team should take advantage of that. Mostly the young guys.”

–Field Level Media

Source link
#Deadspin #Mickey #Moniak #sparkling #Colorado #rock #Astros

INDIANAPOLIS — It’s the third quarter of a late May game against the Valkyries and the Fever are looking to cap off a third-quarter rally that saw them overturn a seven-point deficit to take the lead.

With 20 seconds remaining, a miscommunication by the Golden State defense allows Kelsey Mitchell to find Raven Johnson in the corner for a three that ignites the home crowd.

In a moment that could hardly better define the highs and lows associated with playing rookies, Johnson’s excitement after the shot quickly transforms into overzealousness. Without a single player on either team having yet crossed half court, she fouls Veronica Burton 94 feet from the basket to send her to the free throw line.

As cliché of a rookie mistake as it was, it was also a perfect teaching moment, and Aliyah Boston took advantage.

Standing at half court, she waits for Johnson, puts her arms on her shoulders and offers advice. Despite being just 24 years old and in her fourth year in the league, Boston has become one of the team’s leaders.

Boston isn’t new to the role. By her own admission, she’s a natural talker. But talking is not leading, nor is it necessarily communicating, either. Those are skills she’s had to develop over the years, something she credits her college coach, Dawn Staley, for helping kickstart.

It’s also something that came along by necessity. When injuries ravaged the Fever last season, Boston became the point guard of sorts at times. Point guards are vocal leaders, so Boston had to assume that role as well.

All those experiences and circumstances have led to this season, where Boston has blossomed into a leader and a constant voice for the Fever, whether in practice, the locker room, a huddle or during the game.

In this moment against the Valkyries, it’s allowed her to help refocus Johnson in a tight game. The results are immediate as Johnson opens the fourth quarter with a flurry of activity, scoring or assisting on the first seven points of the period for Indiana — including setting up Boston for a layup — as the lead extended to double digits en route to a victory.

Leadership is often demonstrated in the moments behind the scenes and away from the cameras, but that game and that moment offered a rare chance for fans to see how impactful it can be.

It’s been clear for multiple years that the Fever have three stars in Caitlin Clark, Boston and Mitchell.

But sometimes even if something is implied, it’s still best to make it known. So, this preseason, head coach Stephanie White took aside the trio and told them the obvious.

“I think we’ve kind of known that from the jump that it’s really just like, we got to — the three of us like as a unit — we have to make sure that we lead the team in the right direction,” Boston told SBNation of White’s preseason message. “I think it’s always different, especially last year with [Clark] being out, so it was like kind of just finding that group again. But I think, honestly, like we’re doing a pretty good job of it.”

Setting aside the multiple All-Star selections in the last two seasons from the three, they are also among the most tenured players on the roster. The roster turnover since the arrival of Boston and Clark in consecutive drafts leaves them as three of the four longest-serving Fever.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)

INDIANAPOLIS, IN – JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images

For Boston, even if talking comes naturally, White’s message was a reassurance that the team needed her to speak up. She took that vote of confidence and ran with it this season, and her team has taken notice.

“I think the thing that really stands out is Aliyah’s constantly the one talking in our huddles,” Clark said. “She’s the first voice we have there…She has a very strong voice and you constantly hear it whether it’s in-game, whether it’s on the bench in a timeout, whether that’s in the locker room on not just game days, but even on practice days too.”

Being the vocal leader also hasn’t taken away from Boston’s production either. If anything, the opposite has been true.

She’s averaging 17.2 points, the most of her career, while still grabbing 8.6 rebounds per contest. Much of her jump in scoring can be attributed to her improvement as both a 3-point shooter, where she’s shooting 44.7% on 2.5 attempts per game, and at the free throw line, where she’s shooting 83.8%.

“I think talking about the game is always great and I think it allows you to just see and understand it a lot more, understand teams, player tendencies,” Boston said. “I think the more that you watch, the more you talk about it, it just makes it clearer.”

As great as Boston has been this season, ask just about anyone with the Fever, and they’ll point to last season as the moment Boston took a leap in many ways.

It was a year marred by injuries for the Fever. As quickly as the team would make an in-season signing, another player would fall by the wayside with the point guard position being the most common point of attrition.

To help alleviate the burden of the rotating new faces, the Fever did what they do so often: lean on Boston.

“At times she was our point guard last year,” Clark said. “And if you’re the point guard, you got to communicate a lot, you got to know what’s going on, you got to be on the same page as a coach and you have to be able to get your teammates where they need to be.”

Boston became one of only three players in league history to have at least 350 rebounds and 150 assists in a season last year. She also realized how impactful she can still be as a communicator even if she wasn’t a point guard.

“I think that just my positioning, how we wanted to play, I think that definitely was a super big part of it,” Boston told SBNation. “So for this year, I’m just trying to make sure that I continue on that path.

”I think you can still lead from the post. I know the guards have the ball a lot, but I think being able to just communicate and talk about what I’m seeing is always going to be crucial.”

On top of everything else, the interplay between Boston and Clark remains one of the most reliable actions for any team in the league. What continues to make Boston particularly difficult to defend is her passing ability. As quickly as Clark can find Boston on a roll to the rim, the latter can hit the former on a backcut.

Boston is one of only two players in the league this season with a total rebound percentage and an assist percentage both above 20%. The Fever are putting the ball in her hands more than ever before, evidenced by her career-high 27.8% usage percentage, and she’s repaying them with career numbers.

“She’s solid,” White said. “She doesn’t get too high, she doesn’t get too low. Certainly, every player gets frustrated at times, but she’s an elite communicator. You trust her to make the right play and to make the right read. She brings people together. She’s a connector, which is so important, and she just continues to lead by example and be a vocal leader for our team.”

Those lessons learned from a challenging 2025 season are paying dividends for Boston in 2026. As a team, the Fever have struggled to find consistency this season. Offensively, Indiana is averaging the most points per game in the league. Defensively, they’re allowing the third most.

Not surprisingly, highs and lows have followed them. A recent four-game win streak included a game-winner from Clark in Washington. But that streak came shortly after an ugly loss in Portland, when they trailed by as many as 26.

What remains most consistent throughout it all, though, is Aliyah Boston, who just keeps improving.

#Aliyah #Boston #leading #voice #Fever">Aliyah Boston has become the leading voice of the Fever  INDIANAPOLIS — It’s the third quarter of a late May game against the Valkyries and the Fever are looking to cap off a third-quarter rally that saw them overturn a seven-point deficit to take the lead.With 20 seconds remaining, a miscommunication by the Golden State defense allows Kelsey Mitchell to find Raven Johnson in the corner for a three that ignites the home crowd.In a moment that could hardly better define the highs and lows associated with playing rookies, Johnson’s excitement after the shot quickly transforms into overzealousness. Without a single player on either team having yet crossed half court, she fouls Veronica Burton 94 feet from the basket to send her to the free throw line.As cliché of a rookie mistake as it was, it was also a perfect teaching moment, and Aliyah Boston took advantage.Standing at half court, she waits for Johnson, puts her arms on her shoulders and offers advice. Despite being just 24 years old and in her fourth year in the league, Boston has become one of the team’s leaders.Boston isn’t new to the role. By her own admission, she’s a natural talker. But talking is not leading, nor is it necessarily communicating, either. Those are skills she’s had to develop over the years, something she credits her college coach, Dawn Staley, for helping kickstart.It’s also something that came along by necessity. When injuries ravaged the Fever last season, Boston became the point guard of sorts at times. Point guards are vocal leaders, so Boston had to assume that role as well.All those experiences and circumstances have led to this season, where Boston has blossomed into a leader and a constant voice for the Fever, whether in practice, the locker room, a huddle or during the game.In this moment against the Valkyries, it’s allowed her to help refocus Johnson in a tight game. The results are immediate as Johnson opens the fourth quarter with a flurry of activity, scoring or assisting on the first seven points of the period for Indiana — including setting up Boston for a layup — as the lead extended to double digits en route to a victory.Leadership is often demonstrated in the moments behind the scenes and away from the cameras, but that game and that moment offered a rare chance for fans to see how impactful it can be.It’s been clear for multiple years that the Fever have three stars in Caitlin Clark, Boston and Mitchell.But sometimes even if something is implied, it’s still best to make it known. So, this preseason, head coach Stephanie White took aside the trio and told them the obvious.“I think we’ve kind of known that from the jump that it’s really just like, we got to — the three of us like as a unit — we have to make sure that we lead the team in the right direction,” Boston told SBNation of White’s preseason message. “I think it’s always different, especially last year with [Clark] being out, so it was like kind of just finding that group again. But I think, honestly, like we’re doing a pretty good job of it.”Setting aside the multiple All-Star selections in the last two seasons from the three, they are also among the most tenured players on the roster. The roster turnover since the arrival of Boston and Clark in consecutive drafts leaves them as three of the four longest-serving Fever.INDIANAPOLIS, IN – JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty ImagesFor Boston, even if talking comes naturally, White’s message was a reassurance that the team needed her to speak up. She took that vote of confidence and ran with it this season, and her team has taken notice.“I think the thing that really stands out is Aliyah’s constantly the one talking in our huddles,” Clark said. “She’s the first voice we have there…She has a very strong voice and you constantly hear it whether it’s in-game, whether it’s on the bench in a timeout, whether that’s in the locker room on not just game days, but even on practice days too.”Being the vocal leader also hasn’t taken away from Boston’s production either. If anything, the opposite has been true.She’s averaging 17.2 points, the most of her career, while still grabbing 8.6 rebounds per contest. Much of her jump in scoring can be attributed to her improvement as both a 3-point shooter, where she’s shooting 44.7% on 2.5 attempts per game, and at the free throw line, where she’s shooting 83.8%.“I think talking about the game is always great and I think it allows you to just see and understand it a lot more, understand teams, player tendencies,” Boston said. “I think the more that you watch, the more you talk about it, it just makes it clearer.”As great as Boston has been this season, ask just about anyone with the Fever, and they’ll point to last season as the moment Boston took a leap in many ways.It was a year marred by injuries for the Fever. As quickly as the team would make an in-season signing, another player would fall by the wayside with the point guard position being the most common point of attrition.To help alleviate the burden of the rotating new faces, the Fever did what they do so often: lean on Boston.“At times she was our point guard last year,” Clark said. “And if you’re the point guard, you got to communicate a lot, you got to know what’s going on, you got to be on the same page as a coach and you have to be able to get your teammates where they need to be.”Boston became one of only three players in league history to have at least 350 rebounds and 150 assists in a season last year. She also realized how impactful she can still be as a communicator even if she wasn’t a point guard.“I think that just my positioning, how we wanted to play, I think that definitely was a super big part of it,” Boston told SBNation. “So for this year, I’m just trying to make sure that I continue on that path.”I think you can still lead from the post. I know the guards have the ball a lot, but I think being able to just communicate and talk about what I’m seeing is always going to be crucial.”On top of everything else, the interplay between Boston and Clark remains one of the most reliable actions for any team in the league. What continues to make Boston particularly difficult to defend is her passing ability. As quickly as Clark can find Boston on a roll to the rim, the latter can hit the former on a backcut.Boston is one of only two players in the league this season with a total rebound percentage and an assist percentage both above 20%. The Fever are putting the ball in her hands more than ever before, evidenced by her career-high 27.8% usage percentage, and she’s repaying them with career numbers.“She’s solid,” White said. “She doesn’t get too high, she doesn’t get too low. Certainly, every player gets frustrated at times, but she’s an elite communicator. You trust her to make the right play and to make the right read. She brings people together. She’s a connector, which is so important, and she just continues to lead by example and be a vocal leader for our team.”Those lessons learned from a challenging 2025 season are paying dividends for Boston in 2026. As a team, the Fever have struggled to find consistency this season. Offensively, Indiana is averaging the most points per game in the league. Defensively, they’re allowing the third most.Not surprisingly, highs and lows have followed them. A recent four-game win streak included a game-winner from Clark in Washington. But that streak came shortly after an ugly loss in Portland, when they trailed by as many as 26.What remains most consistent throughout it all, though, is Aliyah Boston, who just keeps improving.  #Aliyah #Boston #leading #voice #Fever

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)

INDIANAPOLIS, IN – JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images

For Boston, even if talking comes naturally, White’s message was a reassurance that the team needed her to speak up. She took that vote of confidence and ran with it this season, and her team has taken notice.

“I think the thing that really stands out is Aliyah’s constantly the one talking in our huddles,” Clark said. “She’s the first voice we have there…She has a very strong voice and you constantly hear it whether it’s in-game, whether it’s on the bench in a timeout, whether that’s in the locker room on not just game days, but even on practice days too.”

Being the vocal leader also hasn’t taken away from Boston’s production either. If anything, the opposite has been true.

She’s averaging 17.2 points, the most of her career, while still grabbing 8.6 rebounds per contest. Much of her jump in scoring can be attributed to her improvement as both a 3-point shooter, where she’s shooting 44.7% on 2.5 attempts per game, and at the free throw line, where she’s shooting 83.8%.

“I think talking about the game is always great and I think it allows you to just see and understand it a lot more, understand teams, player tendencies,” Boston said. “I think the more that you watch, the more you talk about it, it just makes it clearer.”

As great as Boston has been this season, ask just about anyone with the Fever, and they’ll point to last season as the moment Boston took a leap in many ways.

It was a year marred by injuries for the Fever. As quickly as the team would make an in-season signing, another player would fall by the wayside with the point guard position being the most common point of attrition.

To help alleviate the burden of the rotating new faces, the Fever did what they do so often: lean on Boston.

“At times she was our point guard last year,” Clark said. “And if you’re the point guard, you got to communicate a lot, you got to know what’s going on, you got to be on the same page as a coach and you have to be able to get your teammates where they need to be.”

Boston became one of only three players in league history to have at least 350 rebounds and 150 assists in a season last year. She also realized how impactful she can still be as a communicator even if she wasn’t a point guard.

“I think that just my positioning, how we wanted to play, I think that definitely was a super big part of it,” Boston told SBNation. “So for this year, I’m just trying to make sure that I continue on that path.

”I think you can still lead from the post. I know the guards have the ball a lot, but I think being able to just communicate and talk about what I’m seeing is always going to be crucial.”

On top of everything else, the interplay between Boston and Clark remains one of the most reliable actions for any team in the league. What continues to make Boston particularly difficult to defend is her passing ability. As quickly as Clark can find Boston on a roll to the rim, the latter can hit the former on a backcut.

Boston is one of only two players in the league this season with a total rebound percentage and an assist percentage both above 20%. The Fever are putting the ball in her hands more than ever before, evidenced by her career-high 27.8% usage percentage, and she’s repaying them with career numbers.

“She’s solid,” White said. “She doesn’t get too high, she doesn’t get too low. Certainly, every player gets frustrated at times, but she’s an elite communicator. You trust her to make the right play and to make the right read. She brings people together. She’s a connector, which is so important, and she just continues to lead by example and be a vocal leader for our team.”

Those lessons learned from a challenging 2025 season are paying dividends for Boston in 2026. As a team, the Fever have struggled to find consistency this season. Offensively, Indiana is averaging the most points per game in the league. Defensively, they’re allowing the third most.

Not surprisingly, highs and lows have followed them. A recent four-game win streak included a game-winner from Clark in Washington. But that streak came shortly after an ugly loss in Portland, when they trailed by as many as 26.

What remains most consistent throughout it all, though, is Aliyah Boston, who just keeps improving.

#Aliyah #Boston #leading #voice #Fever">Aliyah Boston has become the leading voice of the Fever

INDIANAPOLIS — It’s the third quarter of a late May game against the Valkyries and the Fever are looking to cap off a third-quarter rally that saw them overturn a seven-point deficit to take the lead.

With 20 seconds remaining, a miscommunication by the Golden State defense allows Kelsey Mitchell to find Raven Johnson in the corner for a three that ignites the home crowd.

In a moment that could hardly better define the highs and lows associated with playing rookies, Johnson’s excitement after the shot quickly transforms into overzealousness. Without a single player on either team having yet crossed half court, she fouls Veronica Burton 94 feet from the basket to send her to the free throw line.

As cliché of a rookie mistake as it was, it was also a perfect teaching moment, and Aliyah Boston took advantage.

Standing at half court, she waits for Johnson, puts her arms on her shoulders and offers advice. Despite being just 24 years old and in her fourth year in the league, Boston has become one of the team’s leaders.

Boston isn’t new to the role. By her own admission, she’s a natural talker. But talking is not leading, nor is it necessarily communicating, either. Those are skills she’s had to develop over the years, something she credits her college coach, Dawn Staley, for helping kickstart.

It’s also something that came along by necessity. When injuries ravaged the Fever last season, Boston became the point guard of sorts at times. Point guards are vocal leaders, so Boston had to assume that role as well.

All those experiences and circumstances have led to this season, where Boston has blossomed into a leader and a constant voice for the Fever, whether in practice, the locker room, a huddle or during the game.

In this moment against the Valkyries, it’s allowed her to help refocus Johnson in a tight game. The results are immediate as Johnson opens the fourth quarter with a flurry of activity, scoring or assisting on the first seven points of the period for Indiana — including setting up Boston for a layup — as the lead extended to double digits en route to a victory.

Leadership is often demonstrated in the moments behind the scenes and away from the cameras, but that game and that moment offered a rare chance for fans to see how impactful it can be.

It’s been clear for multiple years that the Fever have three stars in Caitlin Clark, Boston and Mitchell.

But sometimes even if something is implied, it’s still best to make it known. So, this preseason, head coach Stephanie White took aside the trio and told them the obvious.

“I think we’ve kind of known that from the jump that it’s really just like, we got to — the three of us like as a unit — we have to make sure that we lead the team in the right direction,” Boston told SBNation of White’s preseason message. “I think it’s always different, especially last year with [Clark] being out, so it was like kind of just finding that group again. But I think, honestly, like we’re doing a pretty good job of it.”

Setting aside the multiple All-Star selections in the last two seasons from the three, they are also among the most tenured players on the roster. The roster turnover since the arrival of Boston and Clark in consecutive drafts leaves them as three of the four longest-serving Fever.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)

INDIANAPOLIS, IN – JULY 19: Aliyah Boston #7, Caitlin Clark #22, and Kelsey Mitchell #0 of Team Clark pose for a portrait before the game against Team Collier during the AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025 on July 19, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images

For Boston, even if talking comes naturally, White’s message was a reassurance that the team needed her to speak up. She took that vote of confidence and ran with it this season, and her team has taken notice.

“I think the thing that really stands out is Aliyah’s constantly the one talking in our huddles,” Clark said. “She’s the first voice we have there…She has a very strong voice and you constantly hear it whether it’s in-game, whether it’s on the bench in a timeout, whether that’s in the locker room on not just game days, but even on practice days too.”

Being the vocal leader also hasn’t taken away from Boston’s production either. If anything, the opposite has been true.

She’s averaging 17.2 points, the most of her career, while still grabbing 8.6 rebounds per contest. Much of her jump in scoring can be attributed to her improvement as both a 3-point shooter, where she’s shooting 44.7% on 2.5 attempts per game, and at the free throw line, where she’s shooting 83.8%.

“I think talking about the game is always great and I think it allows you to just see and understand it a lot more, understand teams, player tendencies,” Boston said. “I think the more that you watch, the more you talk about it, it just makes it clearer.”

As great as Boston has been this season, ask just about anyone with the Fever, and they’ll point to last season as the moment Boston took a leap in many ways.

It was a year marred by injuries for the Fever. As quickly as the team would make an in-season signing, another player would fall by the wayside with the point guard position being the most common point of attrition.

To help alleviate the burden of the rotating new faces, the Fever did what they do so often: lean on Boston.

“At times she was our point guard last year,” Clark said. “And if you’re the point guard, you got to communicate a lot, you got to know what’s going on, you got to be on the same page as a coach and you have to be able to get your teammates where they need to be.”

Boston became one of only three players in league history to have at least 350 rebounds and 150 assists in a season last year. She also realized how impactful she can still be as a communicator even if she wasn’t a point guard.

“I think that just my positioning, how we wanted to play, I think that definitely was a super big part of it,” Boston told SBNation. “So for this year, I’m just trying to make sure that I continue on that path.

”I think you can still lead from the post. I know the guards have the ball a lot, but I think being able to just communicate and talk about what I’m seeing is always going to be crucial.”

On top of everything else, the interplay between Boston and Clark remains one of the most reliable actions for any team in the league. What continues to make Boston particularly difficult to defend is her passing ability. As quickly as Clark can find Boston on a roll to the rim, the latter can hit the former on a backcut.

Boston is one of only two players in the league this season with a total rebound percentage and an assist percentage both above 20%. The Fever are putting the ball in her hands more than ever before, evidenced by her career-high 27.8% usage percentage, and she’s repaying them with career numbers.

“She’s solid,” White said. “She doesn’t get too high, she doesn’t get too low. Certainly, every player gets frustrated at times, but she’s an elite communicator. You trust her to make the right play and to make the right read. She brings people together. She’s a connector, which is so important, and she just continues to lead by example and be a vocal leader for our team.”

Those lessons learned from a challenging 2025 season are paying dividends for Boston in 2026. As a team, the Fever have struggled to find consistency this season. Offensively, Indiana is averaging the most points per game in the league. Defensively, they’re allowing the third most.

Not surprisingly, highs and lows have followed them. A recent four-game win streak included a game-winner from Clark in Washington. But that streak came shortly after an ugly loss in Portland, when they trailed by as many as 26.

What remains most consistent throughout it all, though, is Aliyah Boston, who just keeps improving.

#Aliyah #Boston #leading #voice #Fever

England midfielder Jude Bellingham was not given a red card despite appearing to cover his mouth while speaking to Jordan Ayew against Ghana on June 23.

Bellingham’s actions triggered some confusion about why he was not given a red card despite the new FIFA guidelines stipulating that players can be sent off for such an action.

Paraguay’s Miguel Almiron was the first player to fall foul of the rule, earning a red card against Turkiye for covering his mouth in a confrontation for covering his mouth while talking to Mert Mulder upon VAR review.

However, Bellingham was not given a red card as his interaction with Ayew was not a confrontation but a friendly conversation. The criteria for a red card requires the player to have covered their mouth in a confrontation specifically, differentiating the Almiron incident from the Bellingham one.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino pushed for the new rule after Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni tried to hide verbal insults toward Real Madrid’s Vinícius Júnior in a Champions League game.

The rule was worded: A player who covers their mouth with their hand, arm or shirt in confrontational situations will receive a red card. However, players who cover their mouths while having friendly conversations with club teammates on opposing teams, for example, will ‌not be punished.

Published on Jun 24, 2026

#Jude #Bellingham #covering #mouth #Ghana">Why was Jude Bellingham not sent off for covering his mouth against Ghana?  England midfielder Jude Bellingham was not given a red card despite appearing to cover his mouth while speaking to Jordan Ayew against Ghana on June 23.Bellingham’s actions triggered some confusion about why he was not given a red card despite the new FIFA guidelines stipulating that players can be sent off for such an action.Paraguay’s Miguel Almiron was the first player to fall foul of the rule, earning a red card against Turkiye for covering his mouth in a confrontation for covering his mouth while talking to Mert Mulder upon VAR review.However, Bellingham was not given a red card as his interaction with Ayew was not a confrontation but a friendly conversation. The criteria for a red card requires the player to have covered their mouth in a confrontation specifically, differentiating the Almiron incident from the Bellingham one.FIFA president Gianni Infantino pushed for the new rule after Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni tried to hide verbal insults toward Real Madrid’s Vinícius Júnior in a Champions League game.The rule was worded: A player who covers their mouth with their hand, arm or shirt in confrontational situations will receive a red card. However, players who cover their mouths while having friendly conversations with club teammates on opposing teams, for example, will ‌not be punished.Published on Jun 24, 2026  #Jude #Bellingham #covering #mouth #Ghana

Post Comment