CLEVELAND — Iowa women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder could not put the words together yet.
Of course, Bluder has one of the best vantage points when it comes to watching Caitlin Clark play basketball. No. 1 Iowa advanced to their second straight national championship game with a 71-69 victory against No. 3 UConn at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Friday, and Bluder was still sorting out the scoresheet at the podium.
“Has it hit you yet that you only have one game with Caitlin?”
The Hawkeyes (34-4) face No. 1 South Carolina (37-0) in a rematch of last year’s Final Four thriller. In a year where the growth in women’s basketball has soared, the championship game offers the best stage possible.
“No, it hasn’t hit me that I only have one game with her,” Bluder said. “That’s going to be rough because it’s been such a joy to coach her and to be part of watching women’s basketball grow and be excited about her.”
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The Hawkeyes are 65-11 the last two seasons with back-to-back national championship appearances. Clark scored a NCAA record 3,921 career points with a patented logo 3-pointer that has become the signature shot for one of the greatest basketball stars of all time at any level.
“I think it feels like every time we’re going into a game in this NCAA Tournament it’s like everybody wanted to see this, just one after the next,” Clark said. “I think it’s good for women’s basketball. I think being in this moment before I think gives our group a good understanding of what to expect.”
If the weekend in Cleveland is any indication, then it is clear Clark is the main attraction for one more game. When Clark squares up and launches a 3-pointer, you can hear the collective deep breath from thousands who watch in anticipation. Clark started 0 of 6 from 3-point range in the first half against UConn. With 8:11 left in the third quarter. Clark ran off a double screen and buried a 3-pointer.
That is when the temperature of the game turned up.
“It’s this kind of game a few years ago she would have gotten so frustrated,” Bluder said. “She would have been really upset in the huddles. She wasn’t that at all, and sometimes people can feed off of her if she’s like emotionally in a bad way. I thought that her composure in the huddle, even when things weren’t going well for her in the first half, was really a sign of her growth.”
On Friday, 18,284 people in attendance got to experience what millions are watching on television. They want to see Clark and the long 3-pointers. In the event-level halls, hundreds or reporters got their first impression of Clark on Thursday. It was even more impressive.
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Caitlin Clark Mania comes to Cleveland
At least a hundred cameras positioned around the court at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Friday afternoon – with everyone ready to press record during Iowa’s 15-minute practice period. Clark emerged from the tunnel. Matching black practice jersey and shorts. Gold undershirt. Black-and-gold retro Kobe Bryant shoes. This is the trendiest look in women’s basketball.
That entrance – and the corresponding paparazzi – shows a phenomenon college basketball hasn’t encountered with a team since the Fab Five at Michigan in the early 1990s or an individual since Stephen Curry at Davidson in 2007-08. The fascination factor with Clark continues, even if most of those questions have been answered. Everyone wants a glimpse at No. 22. Everyone wants to know why she wears No. 22.
“Honestly, I’m not a very creative person,” Clark said. “I was born on Jan. 22. It’s what I went with when I was about 5 years old.”
“Memories” by David Guetta featuring rapper Kid Cudi – a Cleveland native – served as the soundtrack – and the riffs intertwine in rhythm with Clark’s 3-pointers during shoot-around. A few minutes later during stretching, sophomore Jada Gyamfi confessed to Clark that she just learned this was where the Cleveland Cavaliers play home games – an encounter caught by KCCI’s Shannon Ehrhardt.
Jada Gyamfi told Caitlin Clark during warmups,
“I had no idea the Cavaliers played here.”
Caitlin, “Do you live under a rock.”
Lollll I’m crying. C’mon @jada_gyamfi! @KCCINews @CaitlinClark22 #Hawkeyes pic.twitter.com/xwJR6IRqnc
— Shannon Ehrhardt (@SEhrhardtKCCI) April 4, 2024
“Do you live under a rock?” Clark asked in astonishment.
“OK, do you know every arena where every NBA team plays?” Gyamfi tried back.
Clark sat up and threw her hand in the air.
“Why else would we be here?”
They laughed together. That served as a reminder that Clark is still a 22-year-old college basketball player – one whose creativity on the court has captured the attention of the basketball universe.