Current:Home > ScamsCaitlin Clark delivers again under pressure, ensuring LSU rematch in Elite Eight -Golden Horizon Investments
Caitlin Clark delivers again under pressure, ensuring LSU rematch in Elite Eight
View
Date:2025-04-19 06:23:56
ALBANY, N.Y. — Ever the entertainer, Caitlin Clark delivered the show the entire country has been clamoring to see.
Iowa and LSU in a rematch of last year’s title game. Clark and Angel Reese, toe to toe again, only one of them advancing to the Final Four.
“I think everybody is pretty excited for it. Twelve million people tuned in last year to see this game, might be the same this time,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said after the Hawkeyes routed Colorado 89-68 to set up a date with LSU in the Elite Eight on Monday night.
“These are two really good basketball teams, and it's almost unfortunate they're meeting this early,” Bluder added. “But everybody that's left now is really good. LSU is certainly that.”
The game actually peaked at 12.6 million viewers, but Bluder's point is made. Clark and Reese’s trash talking and playmaking in and ahead of last year’s game was an absolute gift to women’s sports. The interest in women’s sports that already was growing exploded exponentially, and that’s only continued this season.
FOLLOW THE MADNESS: NCAA basketball bracket, scores, schedules, teams and more.
That they are meeting again in this year’s NCAA Tournament — the last for Clark and possibly for Reese — is a gift to us all.
"Anytime you have a chance to go up against somebody you lost to, it brings a little more energy," Clark said. "At this point in the tournament every single team is good, whether you're playing West Virginia, whether you're playing Colorado, whether you're playing LSU, you prep the exact same way. You come in with the exact same mindset.
"Overall it's just going to be a really great game for women's basketball."
Making it that much better was there were times, both during the season and during this tournament, that it seemed as if it wouldn’t happen. Even after they were put on a collision course by the selection committee.
What, you think the committee was going to pass up an opportunity to stage a rematch? Committee members are fans of the game, too.
LSU, a No. 3 seed, has had a streaky season and got all it could handle in its first-round game against Rice. Reese had a season-low 10 points against the Owls, though she did have 19 rebounds.
Iowa has looked vulnerable since the Big Ten Tournament title game. The Hawkeyes needed overtime to beat Nebraska for a three-peat before being pushed by Holy Cross and pushed around by West Virginia. It looked as if the frenzy that surrounded them during Clark’s assault on the record books had finally caught up to them, and it didn’t help that they’d lost starter Molly Davis to injury in the regular-season finale.
But Clark plays best when the spotlight is on her, and Saturday’s game was no different.
MORE:Iowa and LSU meet again, this time in Elite Eight. All eyes on Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese
OPINION:LSU women's basketball coach Kim Mulkey subjected to harsh lens that no male coach is
She set the tone for the Hawkeyes with a driving layup on Iowa’s first possession and fed Gabbie Marshall and Kate Martin for the next two buckets. After Jaylyn Sherrod’s layup cut Iowa’s lead to three, Clark fed Martin and then Hannah Stuelke to start an Iowa run.
By the time Clark hit a step-back 3-pointer that she might as well have taken from Massachusetts, Iowa was up by 14 and the game was effectively over. Colorado managed to get within single digits twice more in the first half, only to have Clark answer back each time.
Iowa led by double figures the entire second half.
“This was the first time in about three games we were able to put together what felt like a complete basketball game on both ends of the floor, whether it was in transition or on defense or really executing our offense,” Clark said. “I think being able to build off that and take that momentum into our next game.”
Clark finished with 29 points and 15 assists and came within four rebounds of a triple-double. After six or more turnovers in the last five games, she had just two.
Even more important than Clark getting her groove back, however, was the rest of the Iowa team finding theirs, too.
Four other Hawkeyes finished in double figures, including a double-double by Stuelke (11 points, 10 rebounds) and a near-one by Martin (14 points, nine boards). Sydney Affolter, pressed into the starting lineup after Davis’ injury, had a monster performance, going a perfect 6 for 6 from the floor and finishing with 15, her second-most of the season. Marshall finished with 14.
The Hawkeyes also held Colorado below 38% shooting and won the rebounding battle, 43-34.
“Obviously there's a lot of attention on Caitlin, and she's going to get one or two people who have to look at her throughout the whole possession. So I think that leaves other people open,” Marshall said. “And I think that's kind of what you saw tonight is just a complete basketball game.”
It couldn’t have come at a better time, because Reese and LSU await.
In a season when almost every game Clark and Iowa played seemed like a historic event, this one's going to be truly epic.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Trump seeks delay of civil trial in E. Jean Carroll defamation suit
- Prosecutors in Idaho request summer trial dates for man accused of killing 4 university students
- Pistons fall to Nets, match NBA single-season record with 26th consecutive loss
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- North Dakota lawmaker made homophobic remarks to officer during DUI stop, bodycam footage shows
- On the weekend before Christmas, ‘Aquaman’ sequel drifts to first
- Czech Republic holds a national day of mourning for the victims of its worst mass killing
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Pakistani police free 290 Baloch activists arrested while protesting extrajudicial killings
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Joseph Parker stuns Deontay Wilder, boxing world with one-sided victory
- Charlie Sheen’s neighbor arrested after being accused of assaulting actor in Malibu home
- We Would Have Definitely RSVP'd Yes to These 2023 Celebrity Weddings
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Woman who was shot in the head during pursuit sues Missississippi’s Capitol Police
- Americans beg for help getting family out of Gaza. “I just want to see my mother again,’ a son says
- Toyota recalls 2023: Check the full list of models recalled this year
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
‘Pray for us’: Eyewitnesses reveal first clues about a missing boat with up to 200 Rohingya refugees
NFL Saturday doubleheader: What to know for Bengals-Steelers, Bills-Chargers matchups
Is pot legal now? Why marijuana is both legal and illegal in US, despite Biden pardons.
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Pistons fall to Nets, match NBA single-season record with 26th consecutive loss
Supreme Court declines to fast-track Trump immunity dispute in blow to special counsel
FDA says watch out for fake Ozempic, a diabetes drug used by many for weight loss