Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Caitlin Clark Effect Fuels Fever’s New $78M Downtown Training Center

WNBA team practice facilities historically have been substandard, particularly relative to the league’s accelerating growth. The Fever’s ambitious plans extend a wave of change happening in the league. 

The Indianapolis Star

The Caitlin Clark Effect is now extending to the Fever’s plans to develop a $78 million training center in downtown Indianapolis. 

The forthcoming Indiana Fever Sports Performance Center, slated to open before the 2027 WNBA season, will feature two full-size courts, strength and conditioning facilities, a range of additional recovery and wellness rooms including those with infrared light therapy and hydrotherapy pools, and even podcast and content production studio space. Fever owner Pacers Sports & Entertainment will privately fund the development of the three-story, 108,000-square-foot facility. 

The decision to build the new training complex, of course, is not solely a function of Clark’s arrival last year to the team, but the timing does provide another indicator of how transformative she has been to the Fever—and the league overall—over the past nine months.

With the former Iowa superstar in the fold, nearly all of Indiana’s games were nationally televised, fueling the league’s most-watched regular season. Attendance across the WNBA rose 47%, and the Fever specifically increased by nearly 320% to a league-leading average of more than 17,000 per game. 

Now, the Fever are poised to have a training facility commensurate with that rising stature and impact. The facility will be located on the site of the former Marion County Jail. The Fever have been practicing in Gainbridge Fieldhouse, the arena they share with the NBA’s Pacers.

“As we look to the future, the focus of creating a first-class player experience designed exclusively for women athletes will set us apart,” said Fever president of basketball and business operations Kelly Krauskopf.

Bigger Development Push

The Fever are hardly alone across the WNBA in developing or seeking better training facilities. 

Long a pain point within the league as it continues its accelerating growth trajectory, other franchises that have made similar moves to create purpose-built practice complexes in the last two years include the Las Vegas Aces, Phoenix Mercury, and Seattle Storm—while the Chicago Sky have one under construction and scheduled to open late this year, and the defending league champion New York Liberty are pursuing one as well. Each project has exceeded $35 million in cost, with the Las Vegas facility nearly three times as expensive. 

In addition to their training benefits, these hubs are also widely seen as a critical tool in player recruitment and engagement, with teams such as the Sky losing out on multiple talent opportunities because of what they’ve had to offer for a practice facility.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Natasha Watley

Softball Legend From LA ‘Heartbroken’ Olympic Tourney Will Be in Oklahoma

The LA28 Olympics will feature softball again after eight years.
breaking

WNBA, WNBPA Meet All Night—No CBA Deal Yet

The sides met deep into the night at a New York hotel.
Venus Williams waves to fans as she walks off the court after her loss to Diane Parry in the first round of the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., Thursday, March 5, 2026.

Indian Wells $1M Mixed Doubles Purse Attracts Singles Stars

The tournament increased the prize money to $1 million from $370,000.

Featured Today

Alex Eala Has Become One of the Biggest Draws in Tennis

Eala will face Coco Gauff in the third round at Indian Wells.
Jun 9, 2021; Paris, France; The racket of Coco Gauff (USA) after she smashed it during her match against Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) on day 11 of the French Open at Stade Roland Garros
March 6, 2026

The ‘Rage Room’ Is the Hottest Place in Tennis

The idea came from a player podcast.
March 5, 2026

Mark DeRosa Is Still Baseball’s Swiss Army Knife

DeRosa is the sport’s utility player both on the field and off.
Nicole Silveira
March 3, 2026

The Tattoo Marking Membership in the Most Exclusive Club in Sports

For athletes, the Olympic rings tattoo is “about everything it took.”
Tennis fans watch a BNP Paribas Open third-round match between Taylor Fritz and Alex Michelsen on Stadium 2 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, Calif., on Monday, March 9, 2026.

Indian Wells’ Reserved-Seating Shift Draws Criticism

A tournament spokesperson says they will “carefully evaluate” their decision.
Aug 25, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; A general view of Progressive Field in the seventh inning of a game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Tampa Bay Rays.
March 4, 2026

Ohio Pro Teams Jockey for $400M in Stadium Funds

Nearly every Ohio pro team has applied for public aid for venue renovations.
March 10, 2026

Judge Blocks Plan to Use Unclaimed Funds for Browns Stadium

A preliminary injunction blocks, for now, the use of unclaimed funds.
Sponsored

Paul Rabil: Why Owning a Team Is a 100x Bet

Paul Rabil shares how he left an established league to build PLL.
Brandon Johnson
March 3, 2026

Chicago Makes Last-Ditch Push to Keep Bears

Political division remains in Illinois as stadium deliberations continue. 
February 26, 2026

Indiana Approves Bears Stadium Plan, Turns Up Heat on Illinois

Indiana Gov. Mike Braun signs a stadium development framework.
February 25, 2026

Jaguars Adjust Their London Plans for $1.4B Stadium Overhaul

The NFL franchise is undergoing a $1.4 billion stadium renovation in Jacksonville.
February 24, 2026

Bears Stadium Fight Escalates As Illinois and Indiana Make Moves

The Indiana House overwhelmingly passes a stadium funding bill.