After Caitlin Clark is drafted No. 1, Sparks select Cameron Brink and Rickea Jackson

After Caitlin Clark is drafted No. 1, Sparks select Cameron Brink and Rickea Jackson
Stanfords Cameron Brink, left, poses for a photo with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected second over by the Los Angeles Sparks during the first round of the WNBA basketball draft, Monday, April 15, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
(Adam Hunger / Associated Press)

After Caitlin Clark is drafted No. 1, Sparks select Cameron Brink and Rickea Jackson

Steve Galluzzo April 15, 2024

For the first time in franchise history, the

Los Angeles

Sparks were fortunate to have two of the top four picks in the WNBA draft, and the team chose Stanford center Cameron Brink at No. 2, then University of Tennessee forward Rickea Jackson at No. 4 on Monday evening at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.

Brink was

named selected

Pac-12 player of the year after leading the nation in blocked shots (3.74 per game)

and while

averaging 17.4 points and 11.9 rebounds. The 6-foot-4 senior also won the Lisa Leslie Award as the countrys best center and was

also

the Naismith Womens Defensive Player of the Year.

Jackson, who averaged an SEC-leading 20.2 points while

adding grabbing

8.2 rebounds a game, was an

All-SEC all-conference

first team honoree and scored 33 points in her last game for the Volunteers.

Caitlin Clark, who became the NCAAs all-time scoring leader in March while leading Iowa to the national championship game

in Cleveland

, was selected No. 1 by the Indiana Fever, as expected. Indiana also had the top pick last year and chose Aliyah Boston from national title winner South Carolina.

The Chicago Sky had the third pick and chose South Carolina center Kamilla Cardoso, a 6-foot-7 senior who averaged 16.6 points and 10.2 rebounds per game while shooting 63.8 percent from the field during the Gamecocks run through the NCAA tournament.

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