While the Indiana Fever are now riding high with Caitlin Clark, Aliyah Boston, and a revitalized fanbase, not everyone’s forgetting where the franchise came from — especially not the players who were there during the dark years.

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In a bold and brutally honest interview this week, a former Fever player broke the silence and confirmed what many fans and analysts had long suspected:

“The old Fever? That wasn’t a winning culture. We were just surviving — not competing.”

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No Names, No Filters

Though the player asked not to be named directly, their résumé includes multiple seasons with Indiana during the team’s extended rebuild from 2017 to 2022. In the interview, they didn’t hold back:

“There were nights we walked into the gym already knowing we were going to lose. Not because we didn’t have talent, but because everything around us — the energy, the structure, the expectations — was low-level.”

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“We weren’t being pushed to grow. We were just trying to make it to the next game.”

The former player cited poor leadership, a lack of accountability, and frequent front-office turnover as major issues that kept the team from building momentum or establishing a strong identity.

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Stats Don’t Lie

Between 2017 and 2022, the Fever:

Had zero winning seasons

Missed the playoffs every year

Rotated through five head coaches

Became known more for draft picks than wins

 

 

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Even top prospects like Kelsey Mitchell and Teaira McCowan were stuck in a cycle of underperformance and inconsistency. The front office’s instability led to roster shuffling, coaching drama, and a fan base that was losing patience.

“It felt like we were part of a long-term rebuild with no actual blueprint,” the former player said. “And no one knew how to stop the bleeding.”

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New Era, New Standards

But now? Everything’s changed.

With the arrival of Aliyah Boston in 2023 and the game-changing draft of Caitlin Clark in 2024, the Fever have gone from forgotten franchise to front-page headline.

Practices are sharper. Expectations are higher. And most importantly — players want to be in Indiana.

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“I’m so happy for the current team,” the former player said. “What they’re building now is what we wished we had. A culture that expects greatness, not just effort.”

Kelsey Mitchell Reacts

Current veteran and longtime Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell, when asked about the comments, didn’t deny the sentiment:

“I’ve lived through both eras. And yeah, this feels different. We finally have structure. We finally have vision. We finally have belief.”

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Why This Matters

For a franchise that once had a proud legacy — including a 2012 WNBA Championship — the last decade has been hard to swallow. But acknowledging the past, even the ugly parts, is a key part of moving forward.

This interview wasn’t meant to throw shade. It was a reality check — and maybe even a celebration of how far the Fever have come.

From survival mode to playoff mode — the Indiana Fever are done accepting “good enough.” And it took former players speaking out to show just how far they’ve climbed.