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WNBA star Caitlin Clark opens with Taylor Swift through Chiefs Fandom

A little less than three months after Caitlin Clark had become the leading goal scorer in the history of the NCAA women's basketball of all time, she left the University of IOWA to start her eagerly awaited WNBA career.

From number 1 for Indiana fever to the winning of rookie of the year to the NFL playoff games with Mega-Star Taylor Swift, Clark dealt last year, while he was preparing for her second WNBA campaign in the second year.

The basketball star spoke in a conversation with ESPN about her up -and -coming friendship with Swift, among other things, outside the season.

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The singer-songwriter Taylor Swift (L) talks to Caitlin Clark (R) about Indiana fever in the second half in the AFC division playoff between the Houston Texans and the Kansas City Chiefs in the field of …


Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Clark spoke to Alexa Philippou von Espn about how it was in the spotlight and how she and Swift were connected to the Kansas City Chiefs.

“I think what people with a certain headlights don't always recognize whether it is, whether it is, whether it is another professional athlete or a pop star, we are real people,” said Clark about Swift. “This evening we only have normal conversations like any other person in the Arrowhead Stadium. She loves chiefs as much as I do. I talk to her football.

“She loved it, and just like her passion and frankly, probably one of the sweetest people I've ever gave. And everyone says when they meet them, but it is really true. She only treats everyone with the same friendliness and her family was great.”

A dominant WNBA season, which made a seven-year-old playoff dürre for the fever, was a break this off-season, but the 23-year-old, who took her foot from gasoline.

She told Philippou how her upcoming WNBA campaign thanks to the work she did behind the scenes will be fulfilled with much more confidence than her rookie year.

“There I will find that my self -confidence will come into this next season,” said Clark, “knowing that I was consistent and whether it was the weight room, whether it was my skill development, my shootout.”

Fever chief coach Stephanie White also noticed the progress that the reigning rookie of the year has achieved.

“She is far beyond her years in relation to her understanding of the work,” said White. “They often see newcomers, even the big ones where it usually takes three years to find out. They found it out.”

The low season of working, charging and rubbing the shoulders with some of the most remarkable artists in this generation could soon prove to be the perfect combination for another dominant year compared to No. 22.

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