CLEVELAND – Iowa’s Caitlin Clark smiled through the questions. She shared a laugh with teammate Kate Martin, and she drew a few laughs from reporters at her college press conference. Clark tugged at her jersey.
This is not easy. Clark didn’t win a national championship at Iowa.
No. 1 South Carolina won 87-75 to complete a perfect 38-0 season at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Sunday. No. 1 Iowa finished 34-5 and lost the women’s national championship game for the second straight season.
Of course, there just has to be a GOAT discussion – the everyday sports consumption exercises that fill TV and social media. LeBron James vs. Michael Jordan. Tom Brady vs. any NFL quarterback ever. In this case, the fact Clark forced the GOAT debate in women’s basketball to a wide audience automatically puts her in that conversation.
“I don’t really get offended when people say, ‘I’ve never watched women’s basketball before,'” Clark said. “I think, one, you’re a little late to the party, yes. But, two, that’s cool. We’re changing the game. We’re attracting more people to it.”
That drew the first laugh.
Our take? Clark did not need to win a national championship to be in those GOAT conversations in women’s basketball, no matter what UConn legend Breanna Stewart – who had four as a player – or South Carolina coach Dawn Staley – who now has three as a coach – said before Sunday’s game.
MORE: Caitlin Clark’s record-breaking career by the numbers
Not that Clark did not try. She worked through her pre-game routine, launching what had to be a few hundred 3-pointers across all the spots with the South Carolina team at her back. Clark was back in the black-and-gold uniform from the Final Four matchup with the Gamecocks last season – that game where she poured in 41 points, eight assists and six rebounds in a 77-73 upset.
The rematch started out a lot like that. Iowa had a 7-0 lead on South Carolina before Clark took her first 3-pointer in the first quarter, which she buried after a between-the-legs dribble and step-back on South Carolina’s Bree Hall for a double-digit lead.
Clark hit two more 3s as part of a stretch where she scored 13 points in one minute and 54 seconds of game time. She had 18 points in the first quarter, and the Hawkeyes led by seven points.
This was the show that changed women’s basketball the last two seasons.
Record television ratings followed Iowa while Clark reset the NCAA scoring mark, which she finished with 3,951 points. Clark – with the logo 3-pointers, three-quarter court passes and never-back-down personality – was all of that.
“I think the biggest thing is, for us, this team came along at a really good time, whether it was social media, whether it was NIL, whether it was our games being nationally televised,” Clark said. “We’ve played on Fox, NBC, CBS, ESPN – you go down the list, and we’ve been on every national television channel.”
South Carolina, of course, was the perfect team. Forward Kamilla Cardoso scored 15 points with 17 rebounds. Tessa Johnson came off the bench and scored 19 points. South Carolina led at halftime and threatened to make it a blowout in the fourth quarter before Clark led one last comeback attempt.