When Yale womenโs basketball opens its season at Pittsburgh on Nov. 7, a raucous crowd will be on hand to celebrate Bulldogs senior Jenna Clark, a Pittsburgh native and two-time All-Ivy League selection. Clarkโs mom Amy is inviting former coaches, teachers, teammates, and kids Clark coached โ โevery person I’ve probably ever spoken to in my life,โ Clark told The Next, with barely a hint of exaggeration.
While those supporters will be there to honor Clarkโs career to date, they will also be eager to see what magic the quick, flashy point guard creates next. Sheโs already set Yaleโs single-season assists record and guided the Bulldogs to the four-team Ivy League Tournament. Sheโs been a top-10 finalist for the Nancy Lieberman Award, which honors the nationโs best point guard.
Still, Clark has even bigger dreams for her senior season, including lifting trophies and rewriting record books โ and no one around her is betting against her.
Clark started playing basketball around age four or five, and she fell in love with it almost immediately. She was small but athletic, and her dad Jeff put her through dribbling drills in the basement to develop her skills as a point guard.
By her teenage years, she was a standout, setting Thomas Jefferson High Schoolโs career assists record with 412 and scoring over 1,000 career points. Allison Guth, then Yaleโs head coach, noticed that blend of scoring and facilitating.
โI really thought she was Pistol Pete-esque, you know?โ Guth told The Next, referring to the NCAAโs all-time leading scorer, Pete Maravich. โI thought she really had a unique ability, and you could tell she studied the game. [She] was crafty with her size and skill set.โ
When Clark visited Yale, she felt in her gut that it was right for her. She noticed the closeness of the team and how she fit in so easily, without any of the typical awkwardness of a recruiting visit. She sensed that Yale overall was less โcutthroatโ and more supportive than other elite colleges, and she felt at home there.
โWhen she committed,โ Guth said, โโฆ that felt like such a highlight, like Yale was going to be in an amazing place because of it.โ
The 5โ7 Clark entered a program that was building under Guth, who had been hired in 2015 and led the Bulldogs to the Womenโs Basketball Invitational title in 2018. As a freshman in 2019-20, Clark played behind senior Roxy Barahman, a two-time First-Team All-Ivy selection, and averaged just 0.9 points in 8.4 minutes per game.

It was an adjustment for Clark, who, by her own admission, had been the go-to player her entire life. But crucially, Guth said, she โdidn’t let it shake her confidence,โ and she got better on both ends from opposing Barahman in practice. The Bulldogs finished third in the Ivy League that year, in position for an Ivy League Tournament berth, but the COVID-19 pandemic ended the season prematurely.
Months later, with the 2020-21 season in jeopardy, Clark decided to take the year off from Yale. She filled some of that unstructured time with Instacart shopping and an internship, but mostly she was in the gym. She wanted to get stronger, create more separation to get shots off and develop countermoves to evade defenders.
As a sophomore, Clark put those improvements into action as the Bulldogsโ starting point guard. She took huge leaps in nearly every statistical category, averaging 11.2 points, 5.8 assists, 4.8 rebounds and 1.4 steals in 36.2 minutes per game. Yaleโs offense had her mostly playing in pick-and-rolls, forming a lethal tandem with 6โ5 junior Camilla Emsbo, or taking spot-up jumpers. She was extremely efficient on catch-and-shoot jumpers, and she was similarly effective at penetrating and scoring on occasional isolation plays.
That season, Yale finished third in the Ivy League again with a 9-5 record, and Clark set the Bulldogsโ single-season assists record with 160. She assisted on 38.4% of Yaleโs possessions while she was on the court, which ranked 12th in the country. Her favorite target was Emsbo, who she connected with on 32% of her assists.
โJenna Clark is a special point guard,โ Emsbo, now a graduate transfer at Duke, told reporters in October. โโฆ She’s somebody who gets a lot of joy out of finding her teammates and making them look good, which is a rare skill.โ
As Clark chased the assists record, about half of her teammates were aware of what was happening, and the other half had no idea. When she heard sheโd done it, Clark burst into tears.
โIt was definitely a huge moment,โ she said, โand just kind of a moment for me to reflect on like, โWow, I’m here. โฆ Everything I’ve worked for, it’s starting to pay off a little bit.โโ
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With a season as the starter under her belt, Clark was seemingly poised for an even bigger junior year. But she faced major upheaval, first with Guth departing to coach Loyola Chicago and then Emsbo tearing her ACL before the season started.
Clark said she and her teammates felt โkind of lost for a little bitโ after Guth left, but when Dalila Eshe was hired, the coach and the point guard had a nearly instant rapport. โThe first time I met her, I was like, โI feel like I’ve known her for years. I feel like she recruited me,โโ Clark said.
Eshe was familiar with Clark and many of her teammatesโ skill sets, having served as a Princeton assistant coach before taking over at Yale. She had also gotten a taste of Clarkโs personality in a game at Princeton during Clarkโs sophomore year.
โI remember distinctly,โ Eshe told The Next, โโฆ her coming down the floor, and she dimed Camilla and said something to her like, โThat’s why I love you, babe.โ I was sitting on the bench and I heard her say that, and I’m like, โThis kid is a character.โ Little did I know she is totally the life of the team โฆ just incredibly pleasant and goofy and everything you want her to be.โ
Eshe changed a lot from what Guth had done on both ends of the court, Clark said. Defensively, Eshe wanted โalmost [the] polar oppositeโ of what the players were used to with Guth. And offensively, though Eshe likes to run in transition, she slowed things down last season while the team adjusted to her system.
With Emsbo unavailable, Clark also had to find a new favorite target. The day Emsbo got injured, Clark called the remaining post players and told them she knew they could fill the void. In practices, she developed better chemistry with them, and Emsbo helped coach both sides through the process.

Amid so much change, Clark almost equaled her sophomore-year assists total with 145, fourth-best in program history. She averaged a nearly identical stat line of 10.9 points, 5.4 assists, 4.7 rebounds and 1.7 steals per game, and she even reduced her turnover rate from 26.4% to 20.9%.
โGoing into her junior year with a new coaching staff and now take away [Emsbo] โฆ she maintained, and I don’t think people talk about it that much,โ Eshe told reporters in October. โShe maintained her level โฆ and I just think that’s incredible. It’s very hard across the board what she was expected to do last year.
โAnd so now just being comfortable after going through a year of adversity, the sky is the limit. โฆ I feel lucky to be able to coach her and to have her as my point guard for my first two years as a head coach.โ
As Clarkโs junior season progressed, through a Thanksgiving trip to Emsboโs home state of Colorado and a road win over archrival Harvard in January, Eshe and Clark continued to develop their bond. They are honest with each other, and Eshe can coach Clark hard. At the same time, Clark knows when to take her coachโs frustration seriously and buckle down โ and when to lighten the mood. Sometimes when Eshe is upset with her, Clark will come over, pat her on the arm and say, โItโs okay, Coach!โ
โIt’s like โฆ one of your children where you’re so mad at them,โ Eshe said, laughing. โโฆ I’m like, โJenna, get away from me!โโ
โMe and Coach D, we have fun,โ Clark said.
Meanwhile, Guth watched several of Yaleโs games last season from afar, cheering Clark on but unable to help herself from silently โcoachingโ her former point guard.
โI’m [thinking], โAw, Jenna, you know you got this look,โโ Guth said. โโฆ And I see her thinking the same thing in the next play.โ
Guth added, โThe best compliment I can give is, God, I miss coaching that kid.โ
Yale just missed a return trip to the Ivy League Tournament last season, finishing fifth with a 7-7 conference record. When the Bulldogs lost a crucial game against Penn, Clark sobbed in her momโs arms, knowing exactly what it meant.
This season, nearly everyone returns for the Bulldogs, and they are all more comfortable with the staff and Esheโs system. Now, they can add layers to their schemes, and they plan to run in transition, which should unlock Clarkโs offensive capabilities even more.
When Eshe told Clark that she would let the Bulldogs loose this season, she also warned her that they would have to practice it every day. โYou guys are gonna be tired in practice,โ Eshe said.
โI got you, Coach,โ Clark responded. โI’m so excited.โ

Transition suits Clarkโs game well: She โnever gets tired,โ according to teammate Nyla McGill, and she can make quick decisions to pass or score. Sheโs also fearless, willing to throw high-risk, high-reward passes and usually comes out ahead. Eshe told The Next that sheโll often get frustrated with a turnover from Clark, only to check the stat sheet and see that her point guard has twice as many assists as turnovers.
โI love running,โ Clark said. โI love getting out, throwing the ball, trusting my teammate to go get a bucket. โฆ It’s just gonna change our entire identity.โ
โI want her to be an extension of my thought process, and I don’t want to put [too much] structure on her,โ Eshe said. โโฆ She is best when she is allowed to just kind of go and feel the game.โ
This summer, Clark interned for Dog is Human, a company that develops multivitamins for dogs, but still spent hours in the gym. Her main focus was on consistency โ both to improve her production and because she knows her demeanor sets the tone for her team.
โI think I have all the tools. I have the capabilities to be a great player at all times,โ Clark said. โBut I think sometimes it goes up and down a little bit because I don’t always have the same form, I don’t always have the same footwork and I don’t always have the exact same rhythm.โ
Yale averaged just 59.5 points per game last season, which ranked in the bottom quartile nationally. To help boost that number, Eshe is asking Clark to score more, and sheโs noticed in the preseason that Clark is taking over more offensively. Clark was also relied on offensively last season without Emsbo, but balancing scoring and facilitating at the college level is more intuitive for her now.
Eshe has also seen Clark reach another level as a leader. โEven just her growth from last year through this summer to the beginning of this year, she has grown exponentially as a leader โ just unbelievable,โ Eshe said. Clark understands how to lead both in group settings and in quieter moments, pulling a teammate aside and knowing just what to say.
For her part, Clark said sheโs gotten more confident as a leader as sheโs gained experience. As a younger player, she sometimes second-guessed whether she should speak up. โ[Now I] know what I’m saying is gonna help my teammates and know that they trust me,โ she said.
โShe’s always vocal,โ McGill told reporters. โYou can hear her voice from a mile away. And [we know] that she’ll always have the energy to continuously talk to us and continuously lead us.โ
In the preseason, Clark was voted Yaleโs captain, which her coaches and teammates saw as both a huge honor and wholly unsurprising. โI knew that would be in her future,โ Guth said.

In her final season at Yale, Clark wants to avenge last yearโs finish by making the Ivy League Tournament, winning a conference title and playing in a national postseason tournament. Individually, she wants to lead the Ivy League in assists for the third straight year and rank in the top 10 nationally. Sheโs come close to the latter before, ranking 16th in 2021-22 and 22nd last season.
She also has her eye on Yaleโs career assists leaderboard: Her current total of 318 ranks seventh in program history, and itโs a safe bet sheโll get the 78 she needs to move into second place. (She would then need another 150 to tie the program record of 546.)
โWe all have lofty goals,โ Eshe said. โโฆ My biggest expectation is that she leads us where we want to go. And she’s obviously always totally been bought in, but she, I think, even understands the bigger picture and what her role is โฆ as kind of our heartbeat and our guide more on the court. And I think that she is really ready for the moment.โ
โI’m really excited to see how she leads that team this year,โ Emsbo said, โbecause I think there’s another level for her, and I think she’s just about to reach it.โ
Those expectations, from Clark herself as well as those around her, could create pressure for a player who knows her days in a Yale jersey are numbered. But this is Jenna Clark, the player who finds joy in every assist and in streaking up the court in transition. โShe loses herself in the sport,โ Guth said. โAnd I think that’s just so special.โ
One play that reliably gets Clark excited is a backdoor pass โ the more crowded, the better. โThrough two people, a pass right on my teammate’s hand and a good finish, that gets me hype,โ Clark said. โEven in practice, I’ll start jumping around. Coach D just loses her mind at me.โ
โI tell her all the time,โ Eshe said, โalthough she drives me nuts, I don’t know what I’m gonna do without her next year.โ
