The Denver Post

CU part of transforma­tional year

- By Brian Howell

As she sat down for her postgame press conference on March 24, soaked after a locker room celebratio­n, Colorado head coach JR Payne couldn’t help but express her appreciati­on for the fans in Manhattan, Kansas.

“The environmen­t was incredible,” Payne said after her Buffaloes defeated Kansas State 63-50 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. “Shout out to Manhattan, Kansas. The entirety community has welcomed us this week, and that’s great. That’s a great basketball environmen­t.”

From Manhattan to Boulder, to Iowa City and Albany, N.Y., and all over the country this season, there were a lot of great environmen­ts for women’s basketball.

On Sunday, the top two teams in the final Associated Press poll, No. 1 South Carolina and No. 2 Iowa met in Cleveland for the national title game to cap what has been perhaps a landscape-changing year for women’s basketball.

Attendance is through the roof. TV ratings are setting records — as are the players — and the game is getting more attention than ever. Friday’s national semifinals were the most-viewed on record, including 14.2 million tuning in to ESPN for Iowa’s win against Connecticu­t. On Saturday, 19,000 fans attended the Iowa and South Carolina practice sessions in Cleveland.

Certainly much of the attention is because of Iowa star Caitlin Clark, who is must-see TV, has families traveling across the country to watch her play and will leave school as the greatest scorer in the history of the game. But, the attention is not only because of Clark.

“I mean, obviously, people want to watch her but it does definitely bring awareness to the sport in general,” CU junior Kindyll Wetta said before the Buffs began their NCAA Tournament run last month.

Clark might be the leader of the revolution, but players at CU and around the country have felt the impact and enjoyed being a part of a new age in the sport.

“It’s just special to be a part of, but I also think it’s just gonna grow even more,” said CU star Jaylyn Sherrod, an All-american honorable mention this season. “When you also have the stars in college going pro next, I think that now transfers to the (WNBA), as well, in terms of your Cameron Brinks and Caitlin Clarks carrying that on to the next level. So, I think it’s pretty cool.”

Clark is projected as the No. 1 pick in the WNBA Draft on April 15, while Brink, a star at Stanford, is the projected No. 2 pick.

LSU’S Angel Reese and Hailey Van Lith, USC’S Juju Watkins, Connecticu­t’s Paige Bueckers and many other players around the country have become household names, as well, to the point that celebritie­s are expressing their appreciati­on for the game.

Even Hall of Famer and NBA analyst Shaquille O’neal said on his podcast this week he’s not even really following the men’s college game.

“I’m definitely following the girls,” the former LSU star said. “Actually, women’s basketball is kicking (butt). … Last week was like the first time I watched all girls’ games. Like, I’ve never done it before, ever. It was crazy — Juju Watkins, Caitlin, my girl Angel Reese — they just killed it. I don’t think I even know any men’s (players).”

This season actually began with O’neal in the stands on Nov. 6 at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas to watch his LSU Tigers — the defending champion and preseason No. 1 — take on the Buffaloes.

CU upset the Tigers 9278, and O’neal was so impressed with Buffs center Aaronette Vonleh that he paid a visit to the locker room to meet her.

Iowa has made headlines all year for selling out games at home and on the road because so many fans want to watch Clark. When the Buffs lost to Iowa in the Sweet 16 on March 30 in Albany, MVP Arena was sold out with 13,878 fans — the second-largest crowd for any game in CU’S history.

The growth of the game has been felt even when Clark isn’t playing, though.

Last year, CU had a Sweet 16 team and averaged only 1,660 fans for home games. This year, ranked in the top 20 all season — and in the top 10 for much of the year — CU set attendance records. The Buffs’ average attendance at home was 5,543, edging their previous record of 5,538 in 19941995. The Buffs also had a single-game record 11,338 fans in the stands on Jan. 19 against UCLA. It was CU’S first sellout in 29 years.

“I’ve loved it because I’ve been coming to see women’s basketball games since I started being recruited by them in eighth grade,” said Wetta, who is from Valor Christian High School. “Just to see like the fan section increase and the students start coming and just the Boulder community start getting more and more involved in women’s sports and women’s basketball in general has been an incredible.”

Around the country this year, 28 teams averaged at least 5,000 fans at home, up from 18 last year and only 12 two seasons ago.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Uconn center Donovan Clingan celebrates after their win against Alabama on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Uconn center Donovan Clingan celebrates after their win against Alabama on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.

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