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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowCaitlin Clark’s singular collegiate career ended with a slew of records but not the one title she hoped to bring to the University of Iowa.
The NCAA’s all-time leading scorer poured in a game-high 30 points in Sunday’s national championship against the unbeaten University of South Carolina, including a record 18 in the opening quarter.
The 22-year-old cooled from there, however, as the Gamecocks pulled away for an 87-75 victory, making the Hawkeyes the national runner-up for a second straight season.
Clark—who is expected to be the No. 1 pick in the WNBA draft, where the Indiana Fever have the No. 1 pick—made 10 of 28 shots (including 5 of 13 3-pointers) and finished her four-year stay in Iowa City, Iowa, with 3,951 points, an NCAA record for both men and women. Clark added five assists and eight rebounds.
Her run to a second straight NCAA final helped turn the women’s tournament into appointment television. Her performances have set a new TV ratings record for women’s college basketball twice in the last week alone, with another record likely in the title game.
Clark has tried to take her blossoming stardom in stride, frequently deflecting much of the attention to her Iowa teammates and a sport that is having a moment.
She always had the full attention of opposing coaches. And South Carolina’s depth proved to be too much in front of a packed Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse.
It wasn’t for lack of trying. It never is with Clark.
She came out firing, scoring 18 of Iowa’s final 20 points in the first quarter as the Hawkeyes built a quick 27-20 lead. The Gamecocks used multiple defenders to try to keep up with Clark. It didn’t seem to matter. She knocked down three 3-pointers in the opening 10 minutes, including a rainbow over 6-foot-7 South Carolina center Kamilla Cardoso.
The 18 points broke the single-quarter record of 16 set by LSU’s Jasmine Carlson in the second quarter of the Tigers’ win over Iowa in last year’s title game.
The NCAA went to a quarter system in 2016.
South Carolina, however, recovered to capture its second championship in three years.
Clark checked out with 20 seconds remaining, earning a huge from coach Lisa Bluder while the crowd gave her a lengthy standing ovation.
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Will be fascinating to see what the shelf live of the CC effect is.
College Basketball— will next year’s ratings be in the same ballpark? LSU is a throughly unlikable team from top to bottom. SC appears to be one of the best women’s teams of all time. What would the rating have been if both their last games were against any team not featuring Clark?
The WNBA and Fever are getting a lift from the CC effect. Will that still be the case next year? Or this August?