Ice Man wrote:I thought at the start of the season that the TOs were to some extent the fault of Clark's teammates, but now I realize that the miscues are almost entirely on her. It's not fair to trash her teammates for the mistakes, just to make Clark look better. She's a very, very aggressive passer, which overall helps her team win games, but which does lead to a lot of turnovers on her part.
For proof, see her turnover rate in college. That was also high, every year (about 5 per game), even though the personnel at Iowa was stable. The missed passes aren't because she's new to her teammates, or her teammates are messing up. They are because she's Caitlin Clark and high turnovers are part of what she does.
That said, the reason that she is now getting WAY more assists than earlier in the season is due primarily to her teammates, who are now running the floor and giving Clark the chance to make plays. At the start of the season they weren't doing that -- and that fault was on them (or the coach), not on Clark.
actually i think early in the season, her teammates just weren't used to playing with such an aggressive passer, so they weren't ready for some of the passes that were coming their way, and that led to turnovers. whether that's clarks fault or her teammates fault is up for debate. certainly blame can be shared. just thinking about last game, clark threw 2 full-court passes to kelsey that ended up in a layup when early in the season, kelsey was mishandling those passes.
i think nowadays though, i'd attribute a larger share of the turnover blame to her. i think she's considerably more aggressive now than she was to start the season now that her teammates know to expect her passes and so many of her passes these days are highlight worthy. whether it's worth it or not to be an aggressive passer is another question because she does generate a lot of high-value looks with a ton of layups. it's just high risk, high reward passing