Lexie Hull hit two shot-clock buzzer beaters in the same game. That's the story out of Las Vegas on Saturday night, and it matters beyond the highlight reel.
The Indiana Fever kept themselves in a competitive game against the Las Vegas Aces, with Hull providing the kind of late-clock execution that swings live totals and keeps spread bettors nervous deep into the fourth quarter.
What Actually Happened in This Game
This was a back-and-forth contest with scoring contributions spread across both rosters. For Indiana, Aliyah Boston came out of halftime with 15 points, 8 rebounds, and two threes already on the board, and Mitchell had climbed to 18 points by the time the third quarter was in full swing. Jewell Loyd was drawing fouls and getting to the line. Raven Johnson picked up an offensive rebound and converted a quick two. The Fever were not short on contributors.
For Las Vegas, Chelsea Gray ran the offense the way she always does, hitting the mid-range off her spin move twice in close succession. Jackie Young scored on a euro step and fed NaLyssa Smith for a post basket. The Aces were doing Aces things: patient, varied, hard to stop for a full 40 minutes.
Hull's two late-clock makes are the punctuation on an Indiana effort that looked genuinely competitive all game.
What This Means for the Market
The in-game betting implications are the most immediate takeaway. Two shot-clock buzzer beaters from a role player are exactly the kind of variance that punishes live-spread faders and rewards bettors who took the points on Indiana early. Hull is not the engine of this offense, but finding her twice in those moments tells you the Fever's depth was real tonight, not just the stat sheet.
For future-book purposes, the more important numbers came from Boston and Mitchell. Boston at 15 and 8 through three quarters is a reminder that her prop lines, typically set around her modest season averages, can look thin on nights the Fever get into a rhythm against a quality defense. Mitchell's 18 in the third is a similar signal. The Aces are not a bad defensive team, which makes those outputs meaningful.
On the Las Vegas side, Gray and Young doing their work as usual is not a surprise. The more relevant question for Aces futures and spreads is whether they have enough defense to hold off a Fever team that now has multiple proven scoring nights from Boston, Mitchell, and Hull in the same game.
The Competitive Picture
Indiana was live in Las Vegas. That alone has value as a data point. The Fever's spread performance against top-tier competition has been one of the quieter storylines of the WNBA season, and a game like this, where Hull is burying shot-clock shots in the fourth, confirms the team is not just padding stats in winnable spots.
I'm watching for the final score and box score to land before I frame any next-game spread opinion. If Indiana covered or pushed, that's a market signal for their next number. If the Aces pulled away after Hull's second buzzer beater, then the late drama inflated the competitiveness story slightly. The final margin is the confirmation I need.