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Fever vs Dream: Fever’s Grit Prevails — Indiana Survives 87-85 Thriller to Eliminate Dream and Reach WNBA Semifinals

Fever vs Dream

The Indiana Fever stun the Atlanta Dream 87-85 in Game 3 to reach the WNBA Semifinals, fueled by Aliyah Boston’s go-ahead layup, Kelsey Mitchell’s scoring and Lexie Hull’s defense. Full recap, stats, Bracket update and where to watch.

Quick snapshot — Fever vs Dream

The No. 6 seed Indiana Fever pulled off a stunning 87-85 road victory in Game 3 over the No. 3 seed Atlanta Dream, closing a resilient 7-0 finish behind Aliyah Boston’s go-ahead layup, Lexie Hull’s late steal, and heroic defense to advance to the WNBA Semifinals.

Why this matchup mattered

Series recap and game flow

Game Location Score Brief Narrative
Game 1 Atlanta (home) Dream 80 – Fever 68 Atlanta’s defense showed up. Allisha Gray and Rhyne Howard scored efficiently, and Indiana struggled to shoot (34.9%) and didn’t spread scoring beyond Kelsey Mitchell’s 27 points.
Game 2 Indiana (home) Fever 77 – Dream 60 Indiana bounced back at Gainbridge Fieldhouse behind 19 points from Kelsey Mitchell and 15 from Aliyah Boston, dominating early and forcing a Game 3.
Game 3 Atlanta (road) Fever 87 – Dream 85 A dramatic finish: after trailing late, Indiana closed the game on a 7-0 run. Boston’s layup with 7.4 seconds left put them ahead, Lexie Hull stole the inbound, and Odyssey Sims hit a free throw with 1.2 seconds to go to nail down the win.

Game 1: Atlanta asserts control

The Dream set the tone early and never looked back. Indiana shot poorly, turned the ball over 15 times, and failed to generate consistent secondary scoring beyond Mitchell’s 27-point performance. Atlanta’s Allisha Gray and Rhyne Howard each scored 20 points, exploiting mismatches and grabbing extra possessions.

Game 2: Indiana’s response

Back in Indy, the Fever showed a more assertive, disciplined version of themselves. A hot start—boosted by a second-quarter flurry—and superior control of rebounds and momentum allowed Indiana to dominate. Kelsey Mitchell’s perimeter work and Aliyah Boston’s inside presence (15 points) anchored the win.

Game 3: Grit, resilience, and a historic finish

Game 3 in Atlanta was a playoff war. Indiana, trailing late after a Dream basket by Rhyne Howard with 2:32 left, would not quit. Kelsey Mitchell hit a clutch layup off a Boston feed to draw within one possession. Lexie Hull then scored with 43.1 seconds left, and after a missed Dream attempt, Odyssey Sims fed Boston for the go-ahead layup with 7.4 seconds left. Hull sealed it with a steal, Sims hit one of two free throws with 1.2 seconds remaining, and Indiana closed the game on a 7-0 spurt to eliminate the higher-seeded Dream.

 

Key performers & stat leaders

Player Team Key Contributions
Kelsey Mitchell Fever Led all scorers in Game 3 with 24 points, scored 19 in Game 2, and provided perimeter aggression and clutch shooting.
Aliyah Boston Fever Double-double in Game 3 (14 pts, 12 reb, 6 ast), scored the go-ahead bucket, and anchored both ends with her physicality.
Lexie Hull Fever Provided key defensive stop (steal on inbound) and timely scoring — 10 points in Game 3, persuading many that her playoff poise is real.
Odyssey Sims Fever Ferried the ball into Boston for her go-ahead bucket and dropped 16 points, 8 assists in the deciding game.
Natasha Howard Fever Double-digit scoring (12 pts, 6 reb in Game 3) and physical toughness, helping wear down the Dream’s interior defense.
Allisha Gray Dream Scored 19 points and snagged 12 rebounds in Game 3, often trying to will the Dream to victory with effort and scoring.
Jordin Canada Dream Recorded a double-double in Game 3: 18 points and 10 assists. She was central to Atlanta’s playmaking attack and closing efforts.
Rhyne Howard Dream Scored 16 points in Game 3, including the hoop that put Dream up 85-80 with 2:32 left. Mental errors in the final possession hurt, but she was aggressive all night.

Other statistical notes:

[Note: Images are collected from Instagram]

 

Tactical breakdown — how the Fever closed it out

a) Incremental momentum building

Indiana didn’t rely on a single big run in Game 3. Instead, they chipped away, staying within one or two possessions and defending with increased intensity each defensive stop. The belief in their defensive identity allowed the game to stay close enough for a finish.

b) Role clarity and “next-person-up” resolve

With Caitlin Clark out, the Fever leaned on Kelsey Mitchell, Aliyah Boston, Lexie Hull, Natasha Howard, Odyssey Sims, and bench contributors like Shey Peddy and Aerial Powers. Coach Stephanie White’s system emphasized accountability, rotational trust, and attacking mismatches without panicking when rotations shifted.

c) Late-game composure

In crunch time, Indiana executed precisely: Hull’s inbound steal, Sims getting the ball to Boston for the go-ahead bucket, and then a back-end defensive play that disrupted Atlanta’s closing set. Indiana’s experience and discipline shone through.

d) Rebounding and hustle

Across Games 2 and 3, Indiana improved its rebounding margins, limiting Dream second-chance opportunities and generating extra possessions. Combined with disciplined transition defense, the Fever made Atlanta earn every point.

 

The broader WNBA playoff picture & bracket implications

Here’s an updated snapshot of the 2025 WNBA playoff bracket (after the Fever upset):

WNBA Semifinals (best-of-5)

MN Lynx        |   VS    |  (Mercury vs Liberty winner)
Indiana Fever  |   VS    |  Las Vegas Aces

Watching & following Indiana Fever vs Atlanta Dream

 

Final thoughts — resilience wins championships

The 2025 Indiana Fever demonstrated that playoff basketball rewards more than stats or seeding. It rewards heart, preparation, and belief—in short, resilience. Despite multiple injuries and a daunting matchup against a higher-seeded Dream roster, the Fever leaned into a team-first identity, exploited mismatches, pressured turnovers, and delivered under pressure when it mattered most.

Closing out the series on the road, in hostile territory, with a late-game comeback, may end up being a signature moment—not just for this season, but for this roster and its young core. The semifinal matchup with the Las Vegas Aces looms as the next big test: will the Fever’s heart translate when facing a more balanced explosion of star power and depth? If Indiana’s Game 3 finish tells us anything, it’s that they won’t go quietly.

For fans—and especially for bettors, bracket fillers, and playoff narrative seekers—this series is another reminder that the WNBA playoff bracket is a site of constant surprises. Underestimate Indiana at your peril.

 

FAQs fans are searching for

Q: What was the Fever vs Dream Game 3 score?
A: Indiana Fever defeated the Atlanta Dream 87-85 in Game 3 of the 2025 first-round WNBA Playoffs. (Indiana Fever)

Q: Who hit the go-ahead basket for Indiana?
A: Aliyah Boston scored the go-ahead layup with 7.4 seconds remaining, after a sequence that began with a steal by Lexie Hull on an Atlanta inbound. (WNBA)

Q: Who led scoring for the Fever?
A: Kelsey Mitchell led all scorers in Game 3 with 24 points. Odyssey Sims added 16 points and 8 assists, Boston had a 14/12/6 stat line, Hull scored 10, and Natasha Howard chipped in 12 points. (Indiana Fever)

Q: When was the Fever’s last playoff series win?
A: Before this game, Indiana Fever’s last playoff series win was in 2015. (Indiana Fever)

Q: Where does Indiana go now?
A: The Fever advance to the WNBA Semifinals and will face the Las Vegas Aces, who won their first-round matchup. (CBSSports.com)

 

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