Caitlin Clark Has Already Earned a Top‑4 WNBA Guard Spot

Caitlin Clark Has Already Earned a Top‑4 WNBA Guard Spot

Caitlin Clark Deserves a Top‑4 Guard Spot

ESPN personality David Dennis Jr. caused a stir when he questioned whether Caitlin Clark belongs in the WNBA’s top four guards. He based his comment on the players’ vote that placed Clark 11th among guards, insisting “nobody can at this point” argue she is a top‑4 guard. While his take is clearly opinion‑driven, the data on the court tells a different story.

Clark’s Record‑Setting Season

Even with missed time due to injury, Clark’s first three seasons already rank among the league’s all‑time benchmarks. In 2026 she became the fastest player to reach 1,000 points and 500 assists, and she also broke the record for the quickest 250 points and 50 assists in a single season. She later crossed the mark for most career 20‑point/10‑assist games and now holds the streak for the most 20‑point/5‑assist games in one season, with six consecutive performances. ESPN recently ranked her the third‑best overall player, behind A’ja Wilson and Kelsey Plum. Her June dominance earned her Eastern Conference Player of the Month honors, and she landed third in media voting for the 2026 All‑Star Game.

Statistical Profile That Speaks Elite

Guard‑level statistics place Clark near the summit of the WNBA. She sits fourth in points per game for guards at 20.5, just behind Marina Mabrey’s 20.6. In assists she leads the league with 7.9 per game, the highest mark posted by any guard this season. Clark also ranks fifth among guards in 3‑point shooting (2.5 per game) and ties Dallas Wings guard Paige Bueckers for rebounds at four per game. These numbers make her the only guard in the top five of both scoring and playmaking categories.

Her turnover rate leads the league at 4.6 per game, but she sits ahead of elite facilitators such as Jackie Thomas (3.9), Olivia Miles (3.4), and Aces guards Chelsea Gray and Kelsey Plum (both 3.1). While her defensive consistency remains a point of criticism, her ability to generate offense is on par with the league’s best scorers and playmakers.

Where Clark Fits Among the Guard Elite

The conversation about the top four guards inevitably includes a long list of peers. Contenders like Kelsey Mitchell (Fever), Allisha Gray and Rhyne Howard (Dream), Jackie Young (Aces), Sonia Citron (Mystics), Brittney Sykes (Tempo), and Kahleah Copper (Mercury) are all referenced in rankings. When you stack Clark’s efficiency, versatility, and rookie‑level impact against these names, a case for her spot at the top becomes defensible. While Dennis Jr.’s opinion is open to debate, the numbers give Clark a solid foundation to claim a top‑four guard position.

Upcoming Game Info

Clark is slated to appear in the Fever’s Sunday road tilt against the Las Vegas Aces, according to the latest schedule update. Her return to play will give fans a chance to see her combine the offensive tools that have driven her historic season. The matchup against the Aces also provides a showcase for how her playmaking holds up against one of the league’s top defenses.


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