The Caitlin Clark Effect was never going to stay trapped on hardwood. At Pelican Golf Club, it finally spilled onto the fairways. Before sunrise, fans in Caitlin jerseys and Fever gear were already filing through the gates, drifting toward one tee box like it was a Final Four tipoff instead of a sleepy midweek pro-am. By 7 a.m., there was a legit crowd ringed around the first tee, phones out, waiting not for Nelly Korda, not for a major champion… but for a WNBA guard to hit a golf ball.
That’s the headline here: a preseason pro-am — the appetizer before the LPGA’s The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican — suddenly feels like an event with gravity. Clark is teeing it up in the Annika Pro-Am for the second straight year, this time again as a featured guest, and the tournament is happily leaning into the circus.
And no one understands what’s happening better than the woman whose name is on the marquee. Annika Sörenstam isn’t just smiling politely for the cameras; she’s saying the quiet part out loud. “She loves the game of golf, and I’m so glad that she wanted to come back because it brings more people to the game, brings more people to the tournament, and that’s really what we’re looking for,” Annika said ahead of Clark’s round.
Read that again. One of the greatest golfers of all time is openly acknowledging: this WNBA kid moves the needle for golf.
From packed arenas to packed ropes
If you’ve paid even a little attention over the past two years, you already know the phrase “Caitlin Clark Effect” isn’t hype — it’s data. Her Iowa teams sold out entire seasons, broke attendance records and turned women’s college games into must-see events. In the WNBA, her arrival in Indiana triggered a schedule loaded with national TV slots, road games moved into bigger arenas, and crowds that dwarf what the league had gotten used to. Six different teams shifted Fever games to larger venues before the 2025 season even started because of her.
Attendance jumps, TV ratings spike, jersey sales explode — we’ve all seen the numbers. The Fever shattered the WNBA’s single-season attendance record in 2024, and Clark’s games have routinely been the most watched in the league. Economists have literally tried to put a dollar sign on her presence and ended up talking in phrases like “hundreds of millions” and “a quarter of league revenue.”
So yeah, if she can do that for basketball… why wouldn’t golf want a piece?
Why this pro-am looks different
The Annika Pro-Am is normally a fun, low-pressure prelude: corporate partners, celebrities, a few nervous swings next to world-class pros. Clark fits the “celebrity guest” label, but the vibe when she’s on the tee is more like a tour stop on her own personal circuit. This isn’t just a couple of casual onlookers and a sponsor tent. This is people setting alarms, piling kids into cars, and posting “we’re here for Caitlin” selfies by the ropes.
And she’s not out there as a random beginner. Clark’s an actual golf junkie — she’s played the game since childhood, teed it up at the John Deere Classic pro-am, and now has multiple LPGA pro-ams on her résumé. Last year at The ANNIKA, she split nine holes with Nelly Korda and nine with Annika herself, grinning like a kid who somehow got dropped into a dream foursome.
She’s not perfect, and that’s part of the charm. She’s already had the “oops, almost hit a fan” moment, the mishits, the laughing at herself as a wayward shot finds a spectator instead of the fairway. This year, she’s got Indiana teammates Lexie Hull and Sophie Cunningham looping for her as celebrity caddies, turning the whole thing into a traveling WNBA buddy comedy.
That looseness is exactly what golf has been begging for: something that feels fun, young, and a little chaotic without disrespecting the game.
So what makes her star power hit golf this hard?
It’d be easy to say “she’s just famous” and leave it there, but that undersells what’s going on.
First, Clark’s game — in basketball — is inherently watchable. Deep threes, heat-check shots, swagger, visible intensity. You don’t need to understand offensive schemes to get why she’s worth the ticket. When she walks onto a golf course, that pre-built emotional investment follows. People aren’t coming to see a polished pro swing; they’re coming to see her operate in a new arena.
Second, she symbolizes something bigger than herself in women’s sports. Her rise coincided with a wider boom: record NCAA ratings, WNBA regular-season attendance and TV numbers hitting all-time highs, sponsors finally realizing there’s money and audience here. When a star like that touches another women’s property — in this case, an LPGA tour event named after Annika Sörenstam — it feels less like a cameo and more like a crossover episode in a shared universe.
Third, she’s disarmingly normal about all of it. After previous pro-am rounds, Clark has talked more about how “fun” it was to watch Nelly and Annika stripe it than about her own shots. There’s a humility there that keeps her from feeling like some manufactured brand robot, even as she objectively is a brand. Fans can see themselves in her trying to survive a tight tee box with people watching.
Put all that together and you get exactly what we’re seeing at Pelican: a WNBA guard bending a golf event’s orbit around herself without even pretending to be the star of the sport.
What this says about where sports are going
The real story isn’t just that Caitlin Clark can sell out a WNBA arena and pack out a pro-am tee sheet. It’s that the walls between sports are getting thinner. A women’s basketball phenom shows up at a women’s golf tournament and suddenly new fans are Googling “LPGA schedule” and “Nelly Korda highlights” because Caitlin dragged them here.
For The ANNIKA, it’s a free shot of adrenaline. For the LPGA, it’s proof that tapping into the women’s hoops boom isn’t a gimmick — it’s a strategy. For the WNBA, it’s more evidence that their biggest star doesn’t just grow their pie; she grows the overall market for women’s sports.
And for everyone standing in that 7 a.m. crowd, it’s simple: they get to say they saw Caitlin Clark stripe a drive in person, then go home and watch her drop 30 and 10 on somebody in the summer.
