The Guardian Australia

Clark scores 33 to become highest scorer in major women’s college basketball history

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Caitlin Clark has another career record on her astounding resume: the most points by any major college women’s player to ever take the court. For Hawkeyes coach Lisa Bluder and her peers, this one matters the most. Iowa’s star guard scored 33 points to lead the sixthranke­d Hawkeyes to a 108-60 romp of Minnesota, pushing her past Lynette Woodard on the all-time list with 3,650 points.

“Tonight is the night of the real record,” said Bluder, who played for Northern Iowa from 1979-83. “For some reason the NCAA does not want to recognize the basketball that was played prior to 1982, and that’s wrong. We played basketball back then. They just don’t want to recognize it, and that hurts the rest of us who were playing at that time. There’s no reason why that should not be the true record. ”Earlier this month, Clark passed Kelsey Plum (3,527) as the all-time NCAA women’s scoring leader. Woodard totaled 3,649 points from 1977-81 for Kansas when the sport was under the purveyance of the Associatio­n for Intercolle­giate Athletics for Women, before the NCAA began sanctionin­g women’s basketball with the 1981-82 season. “Maybe the NCAA will realize that now. Maybe it will be brought to their attention, and they will start recognizin­g those women who played in the 70s,” Bluder said. “Remember, they played with a larger basketball and no 3-point line either. ”With 4:17 left on Wednesday night Clark buried her eighth three-pointer of the game to pass Woodard. She also set the NCAA single-season record for three-pointers in the process and finished with the 17th triple-double of her career.Woodard was on her mind when she broke the record. “I’m just really thankful and grateful to have those players who have come before me. Yeah, it’s super special. Obviously she’s one of the best all-time,” Clark said. “It just still shows the room that we have to improve, and where women’s sports is going is a really great place .”Pete Maravich (3,667) is the all-time major college leader for either gender, just 17 points ahead of Clark. He played for LSU from 1967-70 and, like Woodard, in the era preceding the three-point shot. Pearl Moore of Francis Marion has the overall women’s record with 4,061 points from 1975-79 at the small-college level in the AIAW. Moore had 177 points in junior college before enrolling at Francis Marion. There are three other smallcolle­ge players from the National Associatio­n of Intercolle­giate Athletics, including current University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy guard Grace Beyer, ahead of Clark.

Woodard was a two-time Olympian and captain of the 1984 US team that won the gold medal at the Summer Games in Los Angeles, a versatile player and a magnetic personalit­y who played profession­ally in Italy and Japan and in 1985 became the first female member of the Harlem Globetrott­ers traveling hoops troupe. She played in the WNBA in 1997-98, the league’s first two seasons, and was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2004. Woodard was also the head coach at Winthrop for three-plus seasons from 2017-20.In an interview with ESPN on Monday, Woodard said the NCAA is doing the pre-1981 players a disservice. “They should respect the history. Include us and our accomplish­ments,” she said. “This is the era of diversity, equity and inclusion. They should include us. We deserve it. ”Up next for Clark is Maravich, who she first learned about in high school when fans and friends would recommend she find grainy videos of his smooth stroke on YouTube for inspiratio­n. She’s even been called “Ponytailed Pete” at times. “It’s super special just to be in the same realm of a lot of really talented players who’ve done a lot of really good things,” Clark said.

 ?? Photograph: Abbie Parr/AP ?? Caitlin Clark: ‘I’m just really thankful and grateful to have those players who have come before me’.
Photograph: Abbie Parr/AP Caitlin Clark: ‘I’m just really thankful and grateful to have those players who have come before me’.

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