Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Collision raises courtstorm­ing concerns

- By ERIC OLSON and PETE IACOBELLI AP Sports Writers

The visual of one of the nation’s most popular athletes knocked to the floor after a fan who was staring at her phone collided with her while storming the court was a stark reminder of the dangers athletes face when crowds get out of control.

Iowa superstar Caitlin Clark was shaken up but not injured in the collision, which occurred Sunday as she headed toward the locker room with teammates following a 100-92 loss to then-No. 18 Ohio State in Columbus.

It was the second time in less than two weeks that fans have stormed the court at the end of a Big Ten game. It happened Jan. 9 in Lincoln when the Nebraska men knocked off then-No. 1 Purdue. Boilermake­rs coach Matt Painter said afterward game management personnel need to be better prepared to protect athletes caught up in the commotion.

Of the six major basketball conference­s, four fine host schools for a first offense of failure to keep fans off the court. The ACC does not levy fines and the Big Ten waits until a third offense.

“We try not to be too heavy-handed on the policy of court-storming for a problem that doesn’t necessaril­y exist. ... Don’t want to unfairly financiall­y hurt already cash-strapped athletic department­s,” Big Ten vice president of strategic communicat­ions Scott Markley said Monday in an interview with The Associated Press.

“But we do have a policy,” he said. “But generally it’s rely on school policy, local law enforcemen­t, (to) know what’s best for their fans and student-athletes and officials. And we’re always monitoring these things and discuss if we need to make adjustment­s in the interest of a safe environmen­t.”

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