The Indiana Fever will have their own $78 million practice center before the start of the 2027 season, team owners announced in a statement Thursday.
The Indiana Fever have announced plans for a new $78million, state-of-the-art training center. It reflects a recent trend for WNBA franchises to have their own dedicated practice facilities, not
The practice facilities in the WNBA are not always the most glamorous. Take, for instance, the Chicago Sky practicing in a public rec center or the
Pacers Sports & Entertainment announces a $78 million, state-of-the-art sports performance center for the Indiana Fever, set to break ground this summer.
The Indiana Fever are joining the WNBA's facilities arms race. On Thursday, Pacers Sports & Entertainment (the controlling company run by team owner Herb Simon) announced plans to build a $78 million state of the art sports performance center in downtown Indianapolis.
The Indiana Fever will break ground this summer on a new $78 million practice facility on the former site of a county jail in downtown Indianapolis, Pacers Sports & Entertainment announced Thursday.
The incredible level of attention and hype that the Indiana Fever have received in the year since they landed Caitlin Clark has been a boon to the team that they haven't enjoyed even in their championship seasons.
The Indiana Fever are building a new practice facility set to open before the 2027 WNBA season, the franchise announced Thursday.
The Caitlin Clark -led Indiana Fever are making a massive $78,000,000 investment. The franchise will open a brand new 'State of The Art" sports performance center, which will be ready by the start of the 2027 WNBA season. The training facility is spread across a 108,000-square-foot area. The Fever will get the groundbreaking underway this summer.
It eventually might be called the house that Caitlin built. After a run to the postseason behind Caitlin Clark, the WNBA's Rookie of the Year, the Indiana Fever will be on the receiving end of a $78 million "sports performance center" to be built in downtown Indianapolis.
The Indiana Fever got a franchise refresh the past two seasons with No. 1 draft picks Caitlin Clark and Aliyah Boston and a new $78 million training facility, set to open in August 2025 in downtown Indianapolis,