Caitlin Clark Turns Heads with Las Vegas Outfit on Sunday
Caitlin Clark Turns Heads with Las Vegas Outfit on Sunday originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever tipped off their three-game West Coast trip on a bad note Thursday, falling to the Golden State Valkyries.
Advertisement
On Sunday, the Fever had a chance to get back above .500, taking on A'ja Wilson and the Las Vegas Aces.
Indiana head coach Stephanie White will return for Sunday's game. She missed the loss against the Valkyries due to personal reasons. Veteran forward DeWanna Bonner remains away from the team due to personal reasons.
Before the game at T-Mobile Arena, many Fever players, including Clark, were seen walking out of the team hotel in Las Vegas. The former Iowa Hawkeyes star was donning a light mint green pantsuit consisting of a tailored blazer and high-waisted, wide-leg trousers. Underneath, she had on a white cropped top with black and navy horizontal stripes near the hem.
"lookin' sharp," the Indiana Fever wrote on X.
WNBA fans enjoyed Clark's outfit ahead of the game in Las Vegas, taking to social media to leave their thoughts.
Advertisement
"Love AB's outfit. Love when CC looking like she's going to work. That usually means good things to come," one fan said.
"Caitlin Clark looking like a pistachio ice cream cone! Refreshing!!" added another.
"Clarks office suits this season 🫡 🫡 🫡 such a role model," wrote a third.
"Caitlin's dressed for success!" posted a fourth.
"CC's outfit and AB's is cool," commented a fifth.
"oh i'm loving caitlin's outfit so much," wrote a sixth.
Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark.Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images
Despite the Fever's up-and-down start, Clark is off to a solid beginning to her second WNBA season, averaging 19.9 points, 5.7 rebounds and 8.7 assists.
Following the Aces game, the Fever will finish off their road trip on Tuesday, facing the Seattle Storm at 10 p.m. ET.
Advertisement
Related: Caitlin Clark Apologizes After Meeting With Kate Martin
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Chicago Sky Star Makes Demand After Loss on Sunday
Chicago Sky Star Makes Demand After Loss on Sunday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Chicago Sky lost to the Atlanta Dream on Sunday, falling to 3-10 on the WNBA season. While it ultimately goes down as another tally in a growing loss column, there were some positive developments for Chicago. Advertisement One encouraging sign for the Sky was how reserve center Elizabeth Williams performed. The 2017 All-Star tallied 16 points and five rebounds off the bench. While this marked a season-high in scoring for Williams, she had bigger things on her mind after the game. As the secretary of the WNBA Player's Association, Williams demanded player salaries begin reflecting the league's growth in recent years. Chicago Sky center Elizabeth Williams (1).Chris Jones-Imagn Images As reported and transcribed by Sky reporter Karli Bell, Williams issued a clear message: "On behalf on my teammates and every member of our union, I want to be clear that we remain committed to negotiating the next CBA with the league and the teams in good faith and privately, but we do want to set the record straight not for the headlines but for the fans who support us and deserve transparency about what's at stake." Advertisement She added, "This is a defining moment for the WNBA. As the league grows, it's time for a CBA that reflects our true value... We deserve a fair share, and we're demanding salaries that reflect our true value." Last month, Ben Pickman of The Athletic provided some insight into the ongoing CBA negotiations. "Players are coming to the negotiating table with several priorities, including increased salaries, a softened salary cap and more access to family planning services," he reported. "Retirement benefits that provide long-term security for players and their families are also among key priorities, and standardizing team work environments, including facility and travel accommodations as well as support staff minimums, are on the list too." Advertisement Related: Chicago Sky Announce Angel Reese Injury News After Ninth Loss This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘People Are Going To See Something They've Never Seen Before': How Pixar's Next Hit Film Was Made
Fans of laughing out loud one moment and crying into your popcorn bucket the next are in for a treat with Pixar's latest release. Elio is the newest offering from the award-winning animation studio, centring around a lonely boy who becomes obsessed with the idea of being abducted by aliens – and gets more than he bargained for when his dream comes true. As has come to be expected from the studio that gave us the likes of Inside Out, Coco and Toy Story 3, Elio dives into some pretty hefty themes, exploring everything from loneliness and grief to toxic masculinity, all with Pixar's signature sense of humour and adventure to keep younger viewers as gripped as everyone else in the cinema. In the lead-up to the film's release, we spoke to directors Madeline Sharafian and Domee Shi about how sci-fi horror had a surprising influence on Elio, creating something people have 'never seen before' with their unique take on space and releasing an original film in the current sea of sequels and live-action remakes at Walt Disney Studios… Right at the beginning of the film, there's a key scene soundtracked by Talking Heads' Once In A Lifetime. Why was that song chosen, and how easy was it to get? Madeline Sharafian: That scene and that song were in the film from the beginning that Domee and I started. That montage of Elio going out to the beach every day, desperately trying to be abducted, was almost the way that we explored his character as we changed his motivations to wanting to be abducted by aliens. And I think the song was [Domee's] idea of just a way to showcase that he's stuck in this cycle, and he wants to get out. It was a great idea. Domee Shi: Yeah, I always loved that song, I always felt like David Byrne kind of gave off alien boy vibes as well. And the way that the song starts always sounded kind of synthy and celestial and spacey in some way. I felt like there was a connection between Byrne and Elio, and it felt like a cool needle drop choice to put in this montage where we're introduced to Elio's obsession with getting abducted, but being unable to, every single day that went by. MS: It helped a lot that Pete Docter and Jim Morris, our company leadership, really like that song. So I do think that kind of helped us hang onto it and get it for the final, and we're very grateful that we got to keep it. It adds so much to the scene. DS: There was one moment where we did try another song… MS: Oh god, yeah… DS: I was like, 'what about Beastie Boys' Intergalactic?'. And then we tried that for a minute and we were like, 'no, I think we miss Talking Heads', and we went back to that. And also I feel like I haven't really seen [Once In A Lifetime] used a lot in media, in like TV or movies, whereas Intergalactic is used quite a lot. I love that song, though! But yeah… Something else people are going to pick up on is Elio's eyepatch. It really works as a plot device later in the film, but was that always going to be there, or were other ideas explored? MS: It was always an eyepatch, I'm pretty sure. I mean, the eyepatch was there in Adrian Molina's original version [Coco writer and director Adrian Molina originally conceived the idea of Elio to helm the film himself, but left the project halfway through to focus on Coco 2, at which point Madeline and Domee took over as lead directors]. When we took the story, we loved [the eyepatch], just as a way that it supports Elio's feeling of otherness, when he's on Earth, he feels even more out of place. And when he goes to space, all of a sudden, he looks like a dashing space sci-fi captain with this cape and his eyepatch, and the aliens love it, it's like '[you have] one eye, [I have] one eye, this is amazing'. All of a sudden it's accepted and loved. DS: Yeah, it's been great seeing the response to Elio's eyepatch online and with audience members that have come up to us and thanked us for including a kid with an eyepatch – it is something that kids do deal with, and it makes them feel othered. And it sucks! To have a sci-fi hero in a Pixar movie sporting one and looking cool I think is very empowering. Let's talk about the look of the film – sci-fi is a huge genre and even within the Disney and Pixar canon, we've been to space a few times. How did you decide what your version of space was going to look like, and what was going to set the Elio universe apart? MS: Pixar has done two sci-fi movies already [2008's Wall-E and 2022's Lightyear] and Harley Jessup, our production designer, really wanted to shoot for a version that we've never seen. So, he knew that the Communiverse needed to be this sort of beautiful almost Utopia, that there would be aliens from all over the universe gathering there, and almost designed it, one of his very first pieces of production art that I saw that I fell in love with, it was kind of glittering in the sky, almost like a disco ball – the way the lights shimmer on it were like a disco ball. We ended up taking that and putting it in the [finished film], we were like, 'we need to hang onto that'. So, it's bright, it's colourful, it's also softer and round, which I do think is very different from other sci-fi movies. And everything – even the technology – feels very organic, and kind of squishy and alive, which I think gives it a very unique identity. DS: Yeah, all of it points to Elio just truly feeling like he belongs there, and that he doesn't want to leave when he first arrives. And I also love that Harley challenged our character designer to design non-humanoid-looking aliens, and kind of look at deep-sea, underwater creatures for reference. We went with designs that you couldn't possibly do with humans in a costume, right? MS: Yeah, because live-action, especially some of the classics are a little bit limited by that. Like, the alien in Alien is a guy. Really awesome, though, but we were like, 'we're in an animation, we can do whatever we want, so let's make sure that our aliens are taking advantage of what we can do'. Some parts of the film are quite intense and surprisingly quite scary – especially for a Disney film. Was there much pushback because of that? DS: I mean, we were excited to explore other aspects of the sci-fi genre that maybe you don't usually see in a Disney and Pixar movie. We're both sci-fi horror fans, and I think there's a good balance between scary and fun – like a fun scary. There's a sweet spot that you can hit, and we tried to do that with all the scenes with Elio's clone, really pushing the clone's friendliness, but also upping the weirdness and the horror surrounding him, from Olga's point of view where she's slowly realising, 'am I living with a clone?'... MS: …which is a pretty crazy realisation for her! Especially since she starts off the movie as a sceptic of aliens, she doesn't really believe that they're out there, so to take her to becoming a believer… we almost talked about her B-story as in, 'she's in a totally different kind of movie', she is in a pod person movie, and I thought it was fun that we treated her sections almost like a different genre, a little bit. DS: And you know… we'll fine-tune the execution of it, just to make sure that the music isn't too crazy and the sound effects don't give you too much of a heart attack and we release the tension immediately with a joke or a gag or something. But I don't know – I remember being a kid and loving movies like A Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline, where there is like a fun scare. I feel like the original Monsters Inc. taps into that a little bit, too. Elio is coming out at an interesting time for Walt Disney Studios, where there area lot of films coming up that are either sequels, live-action remakes and other ideas based on existing IP, so it's great to see an original story coming from the studio, too. Is that something that's important to you both as filmmakers? MS: Yeah! DS: Definitely. MS: And it's important to Pixar, too, I think. Even though we release our own sequels [Inside Out 2 was the biggest film of 2024, with follow-ups to Toy Story, Coco and The Incredibles currently in the works at the studio], we do talk a lot about how important originality is to us, just as a filmmaking culture, we have a lot of originals coming [Pixar's next release, Hoppers, is slated for 2026, followed by Gatto in 2027] and I would say, whether they're sequels or originals, we hold ourselves to the same standard for both. And our main goal is just to make incredible movies, and amazing stories. I love originals – but Toy Story 3 is one of my favourite movies that Pixar has ever made! So, as long as we're holding that standard of storytelling, hopefully we can make any kind of movie great. But it is exciting to have an original coming out. I think we're the only original [Disney film] coming out this summer, which is so wild [the studio also has sequels to Freaky Friday and Tron coming later in 2025, with live-action remakes of Snow White and Lilo & Stitch having also been released earlier in the year, while Marvel projects have included Captain America: Brave New World, Thunderbolts* (which featured a main cast of existing characters) and the new reboot of The Fantastic Four]. I hope people enjoy [Elio] and they're going to see something they've never seen before – and that's really exciting, and worth seeing in a theatre. Elio is in cinemas now. Watch the trailer for yourself below: Lilo & Stitch Remake Director Addresses Backlash Over The New Film's Changed Ending 'Sobbing, Screaming, Traumatised': Frozen's Josh Gad Opens Up About Olaf's Axed Death Scene Snow White Remake Faces Yet More Criticism Over CGI Characters
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Real Madrid ‘still not perfect,' but it owned Charlotte in FIFA Club World Cup
Charlotte belonged to Real Madrid on Sunday. That was true on the scoreboard. That was true in the Bank of America Stadium seats. It was true during the game. After the game. It was even true before the game — hours before — as Uptown Charlotte got enveloped by the 70,248 people who attended the first of four FIFA Club World Cup matches the city will host. Advertisement Everyone felt that the La Liga giant had Charlotte in the palm of its hand. Even if, by Real Madrid's own evaluation, the team wasn't the best version of itself in its 3-1 win over CF Pachuca, a Mexican club. 'Still not perfect,' Jude Bellingham, the Real Madrid midfielder, said postgame. 'But that's the beauty of it.' The crowd does the wave during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Real Madrid found a way to win Sunday despite being down one of the most captivating athletes in the world in Kylian Mbappe, who spent time in the hospital earlier this week and whose timeline for return is still up in the air. The team did so despite a 7th-minute red card by young defender Raul Asencio, which put the team down a man all game. Advertisement Real Madrid also did so despite many statistics showing that this was Pachuca's game. Pachuca, which competes in Liga MX, had more attempts at goal (25 to 8), attempts at goal on target (9-3), corner kicks (7 to 2). Real Madrid dominated possession — 58% to 42% — but that figure was a bit misleading toward the end of the second half, with Real Madrid up 3-1, pinballing the ball around the middle third while Pachuca tried to seize any and every chance. But what wasn't misleading? The three moments of brilliance that defined the contest. The first came in the 35th minute in the form of a connection between Fran Garcia and Bellingham, who finished off a run with a golden right-footed strike in the bottom-right corner of the net. The second came in the 43rd courtesy of Arda Guler, which was eerily similar to the score from Bellingham just before. The third came in the second half via the touch of Federico Valverde in the 70th minute — extending the score to 3-0. Elias Montiel of Pachuca scored off a strike that was deflected in the box and found the back of the net in the 80th minute to bring the game to its final score. Arturo González of Panchuca dribbles around a Real Madrid player during the Club World Cup Sunday, June 22, 2025 in Charlotte at Bank of America. Sunday marked Real Madrid's first win of the FIFA Club World Cup; it next plays RB Salzburg at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. But for as dominant as Sunday was for Real Madrid, the idea that it left a lot on the pitch on Sunday lingered. Advertisement 'It was obviously tough after Asencio got sent off,' Bellingham said. 'He's a young defender so it happens. There's no harm in making a mistake. It was a test of our character. A test of our leadership as well. I think it was important when the manager decided we had to change shape. We all took that responsibility well. We all kind of communicated with each other to make it easier for the team. 'After that, we had to weather a little bit of the storm. They had a lot of shots. (Goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois) was fantastic. And then we had our chances. We were clinical and we took them. A good win.' Fans gather at Bank of America in uptown Charlotte to cheer for their team: of Real Madrid and CF Pachuca play in Club World Cup Sunday, June 22, 2025. Head coach Xabi Alonso agreed. Advertisement 'Today, I can't say that we have shown what we have tried to train in these couple of days,' Alonso said. 'Or even in the team talk before the game. Today was all about adapting to the context of where we were, with the principles to be in good shape, to have good distances, to have good balance to defend.' This isn't Real Madrid's first time in Charlotte. The squad did so in an international friendly last summer, when they defeated Chelsea FC, 2-1. So it feeling like home might not be all that much of a stretch. Fans gather at Bank of America in uptown Charlotte to cheer for their team: of Real Madrid and CF Pachuca play in Club World Cup Sunday, June 22, 2025. Simón Terran, center, and Rodrigo Hernandez, right. Plus, Charlotte is used to such spectacles. On top of the venue's regular diet of Charlotte FC contests, Bank of America Stadium has been home to the CONCACAF Gold Cup event in 2023 in addition to a bunch of one-off events. In fact, one of those one-off events was the host of one of the coolest moments in Charlotte's sports history — when a 16-year-old Charlotte FC academy player in Brian Romero forced a handball in the box in the waning minutes of the contest, then overtime, then a shootout and then a win. Advertisement That night, for Charlotte, was close to perfect. What Real Madrid did Sunday wasn't that. But to the city that came out to see them, it was wonderful nonetheless. Fans cheer as players enter the field ahead of the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Other moments to catch soccer in Charlotte SL Benfica vs. Bayern Munich on Tuesday at 3 p.m. Round of 16 (Match 50) on Saturday at 4 p.m. Round of 16 (Match 53) on Monday, June 30, at 3 p.m. Get tickets at Federico Valverde dribbles the ball away during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Federico Valverde passes the ball away from Pachuca defenders during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Vinicius Oliveira Jr. dribbles the ball away from a Pachuca defender during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Jude Bellingham celebrates after scoring a goal during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Jude Bellingham dribbles the ball away during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025. Federico Valverde passes the ball away from Pachuca defenders during the FIFA Club World Cup game between Real Madrid and Pachuca in Charlotte, NC, Sunday, June 22, 2025.