Clark breaks scoring record while putting up 49
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Caitlin Clark has filled arenas all season, and the packed house here Thursday got to see the home state hero make sports history. The Iowa Hawkeyes guard broke the NCAA women’s basketball career scoring record, delighting the crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
And she did it about as quickly as she possibly could.
Clark came into No. 4 Iowa’s game against Michigan with 3,520 points, needing eight to break the mark set by Washington‘s Kelsey Plum (3,527) from 2013 to 2017.
Clark converted a layup off the opening tip. Then she hit a 3-pointer from her favorite spot on the court, the left side. Another 3-pointer from the same side produced pandemonium. It took her 2 minutes, 12 seconds to become the record holder.
Clark and Hawkeyes coach Lisa Bluder had said coming into the game that they didn’t anticipate a stoppage of play when the record came. But Iowa took a timeout, and Clark’s teammates gathered with her in a joyous group hug on the court. Clark’s broad smile told the story of the night: The chase for a record she said had never felt like a burden was now hers to celebrate.
“It’s cool. It’s cool to be in the same realm as a lot of really, really good players,” Clark said at halftime in a televised interview. “I’m lucky to do it because I have really good teammates and really good coaches and a great support system that surrounds me.”
She wasn’t done after breaking the record, though. Clark scored a career-high and Iowa-record 49 points in the Hawkeyes’ 106-89 win. She now has 3,569 points for her career.
Her nine 3-pointers (on 18 attempts) tied her career best. She also contributed 13 assists, five rebounds and a steal in the win. She finished with a total of 79 points scored or assisted on, the most by any Division I player in a game over the past 25 seasons.
Bluder took Clark out of the game with 1:46 left, shortly after she made her final 3, and she went to the bench to an ovation from the sellout crowd.
“This is a place I grew up loving, and people have supported me ever since I was a young girl playing high school basketball in this state,” Clark said postgame of setting the record in her home state. “They always pushed me to achieve my dreams and supported me every step of the way. I’m just grateful that I get to wear Iowa across my chest and represent my state that cares so much about women’s athletics and women’s basketball, especially. I get to live out my dream every day.”
Bluder said Clark’s impact is “unmatched.”
“The enthusiasm that she has brought to this program, and quite honestly, to women’s basketball nationally, is amazing,” Bluder said. “I just love it, and we need to ride this. Women’s basketball all across the country needs to ride the enthusiasm that’s going on in our sport right now.”
Clark could reach even more scoring milestones in her senior season. The Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) large-school women’s record — set just before the NCAA era by Kansas‘ Lynette Woodard from 1977 to 1981 — is 3,649 points. The NCAA men’s record is 3,667 by LSU‘s Pete Maravich from 1967 to 1970, before freshman eligibility in college basketball.
Clark is already the first Division I women’s player to reach 3,000 points and 1,000 assists. But records and milestones are just part of Clark’s story. She is a generational talent who is growing her sport’s popularity.
“My favorite athletes are those who are champions in sports and champions in life, and Caitlin Clark is one of those athletes,” tennis champion and women’s sports advocate Billie Jean King told ESPN.
“She is the hottest star in basketball — all of basketball, and not just women’s basketball — and with that comes a heavy responsibility to be a leader on and off the court. She gets it, and that is part of the reason she will have an opportunity to be one of the best in her sport and a role model for future generations.”
There is a lot on the shoulders of the just-turned 22-year-old, but Clark looks as if she’s having the time of her life. She plays with the same passion, confidence and joyful flair she first brought to the court as a college freshman in 2020, when games were mostly played in near-empty arenas because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Now, the “Caitlin Clark Show” is one of the hottest tickets in sports. Fans of all ages call out her name and wear her No. 22 jersey. Parents drive their children hundreds of miles to watch Clark. Police escort her to and from the arena on game days, and on and off the court.
NCAA rule changes regarding name, image and likeness have allowed Clark to appear in national advertising campaigns. Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes complimented her game while talking to media in the lead-up to the Super Bowl. Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, widely considered the best shooter in NBA history, has praised Clark’s shooting form and poise.
“Caitlin’s special,” said Curry, one of the players — along with the WNBA’s Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Plum and Sabrina Ionescu — after whom Clark has modeled her game. “The record speaks for itself, and it’s cool. From a scoring perspective, from a shooting perspective, just doing what she’s doing — she could pick anybody that she talks about in terms of being an inspiration. If she models something of her game after me, I don’t take that for granted.”
ESPN analyst, 1995 UConn national champion and 1996 Olympian Rebecca Lobo said Clark and Curry have similar qualities that make them both successful and appealing to a wide range of fans.
“Caitlin is the whole package,” Lobo said. “She’s playing the game a way we haven’t seen before by a woman. We’ve not seen someone take that many shots from quite that distance and hit them at such [a high percentage].
“And she’s like Steph Curry — he’s charismatic and he’s not a physical giant. So every kid can visualize themselves as Caitlin Clark. It’s not like, ‘Well, to play like her I’d have to be 6-4 or 6-5.’ Caitlin is 6-0, but you actually don’t have to be that tall to try to do the things she does.”
The West Des Moines, Iowa, native opted to stay in her home state for college, leading Iowa to the past two Big Ten tournament titles and the 2023 women’s Final Four. Last season, she broke the record for scoring in an NCAA tournament (191 points), had the first 40-point triple-double in NCAA postseason history and led Iowa to an upset of undefeated No. 1 overall seed and defending champion South Carolina in the national semifinals.
Iowa fell to LSU in the championship game, which drew a record 9.9 million viewers on ABC. The 2023 NCAA tournament catapulted Clark to another level of popularity. That has continued to build since the Hawkeyes’ preseason game in October at Iowa’s football stadium, which drew 55,646 fans, a single-game attendance record for women’s basketball.
“You need superstars in sports,” Julie Foudy, an Olympic and Women’s World Cup soccer champion, told ESPN. “Mia [Hamm] was our superstar. She was shy and introverted. Caitlin seems more comfortable dealing with all the attention.
“But Mia then, as Caitlin does now, also recognized the significance and importance of her popularity. The value of it, not just individually but collectively, and how so many other women could benefit from her stardom.”
Clark could stay another season at Iowa due to the COVID-19 waiver from 2020-21, or she could declare for the 2024 WNBA draft, where she is certain to be the No. 1 pick. Thursday’s crowd started chanting, “One more year! One more year!” while Clark was doing a postgame television interview.
Clark has said she will wait to make that decision until after this season.
For now, she is focused on trying to win Big Ten regular-season and tournament championships and making a return trip to the women’s Final Four.
Whether Clark goes to the WNBA this year or stays one more season at Iowa, Lobo thinks she will keep the momentum going in growing the sport’s popularity.
“Caitlin has kept a level head and good balance. She has a magnetic personality,” Lobo said. “There are just a lot of things that a lot of different people can relate to and love about the way she plays.”
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.