Back in the day, Paige Bueckers and Caitlin Clark were teammates on USA Basketball’s youth squads, capturing gold at the 2017 FIBA U16 Americas Championship and the 2019 FIBA U19 World Cup, before later facing off in the 2021 Sweet 16 and the 2024 NCAA tournament. But in 2022, Paige suffered a torn ACL in a pick-up game, sidelining her for the entire 2022-23 season and postponing her pro debut as she returned to UConn instead of entering the 2024 draft. With Paige out, the Bueckers-Clark rivalry went quiet, making room for the Angel Reese-Clark feud to ignite, splitting fans nationwide. Amid all this drama, another rookie quietly started building her resume—and she’s now rapidly closing in on Clark.
If you thought Paige Bueckers had the Rookie of the Year award all but wrapped up, Sonia Citron is here to remind everyone that this race isn’t over yet. The Washington Mystics rookie has been quietly—and now loudly—making her case with numbers that stack up surprisingly well against the No. 1 overall pick. In 31 games that Citron played this season, averaging 14.8 points, 4.5 rebounds, and 2.4 assists per game while shooting an efficient 47.1% from the field, 38.8% from deep, and 86% from the free throw line. Compare that with Bueckers, who in 25 games is putting up 18.5 points, 4 rebounds, and 5.3 assists on 45.9% shooting, ~34.1% from three, and ~86.8% from the stripe. Paige still leads in scoring, assists, and steals (1.8 vs. Citron’s 1.3), but Citron is the one with the cleaner efficiency.
Where Citron really separates herself is in clutch situations. She’s already piled up 41 clutch points this season, the most by any rookie, and she’s doing it with deadly accuracy — 47.8% from the field and 50% from three in late-game moments. Bueckers, on the other hand, is hitting just 29.6% overall and 16.7% from three in those same pressure situations. That’s the kind of difference voters notice. Add in the fact that Citron has stayed on the court for more games and heavier minutes (32.6 per contest), and you start to see why her name isn’t fading from the conversation.
Even on defense, Citron has proven she can hold her own. She averages 1.3 steals and 0.4 blocks per game with a strong defensive rating of 100, thriving in Washington’s structured system. Bueckers, meanwhile, takes on a bigger defensive load for Dallas, leading all rookies with 1.8 steals and adding 0.6 blocks per game, but her defensive rating sits higher at 105.2. And while Bueckers has carried the Wings’ offense as their lone All-Star in what’s been a rough 8–24 season, Citron has been a steady part of a Mystics squad sitting at 14–17 and flirting with playoff contention. So yes, Paige may still be the favorite, but Sonia Citron has made one thing very clear — she’s not just in the Rookie of the Year race, she’s more than capable of winning it.
The post Not Paige Bueckers but Another Rookie Inches Closer to Caitlin Clark Record With Game-Winning Performance Against Indiana Fever appeared first on EssentiallySports.