Las Vegas Review-Journal

Now Iowa gets to point

Clark’s scoring record behind them, Hawkeyes focused on winning

- By Eric Olson

IOWA CITY, Iowa — More scoring records are in sight for Caitlin Clark, but right now the Iowa superstar is looking forward to a break from the chase.

She passed Kelsey Plum as the NCAA women’s career scoring leader Thursday night, putting up a school-record 49 points in a 106-89 victory over Michigan and running her career total to 3,569.

Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said it was a relief to have Clark’s pursuit of the NCAA record end.

“It’s been a little bit of a distractio­n, but a good distractio­n, right?” Bluder said. “You want these kinds of distractio­ns for your team. But at the same time, it’s time now for us to really focus on making our team better and getting ready for Indiana next week, the Big Ten tournament and the NCAA Tournament.”

With Clark having become the face of college basketball, the spotlight has been on the fourth-ranked Hawkeyes for a year.

They reached the national title game for the first time, losing to Louisiana State in a game that set a TV viewership record of nearly 10 million and is remembered for the “you can’t see me” gesture Angel Reese made toward Clark.

The Hawkeyes drew national attention again in October when they played Depaul in an exhibition at Kinnick Stadium that drew 55,646, the largest crowd to ever watch a women’s basketball game.

And from the start of the regular season, Clark’s progress toward the NCAA scoring record turned into the narrative.

“Obviously, getting this record is tremendous, and it has to be celebrated,” she said. “There are so many people who have come before me and laid such a great foundation for women’s basketball, and that has to be celebrated, too.

“We’re really getting into the best part of basketball season. These are the times when your team really shows who you are, and I believe Coach Bluder always has us playing our best basketball at the end of February and in March.”

When the Hawkeyes play at Indiana next Thursday, Clark will be 80 points away from Lynette Woodard’s major college basketball women’s record of 3,649 for Kansas from 1977 to ’81. The NCAA doesn’t recognize that record because it was set when the Associatio­n for Intercolle­giate Athletics for Women governed women’s college sports.

Assuming Clark breaks Woodard’s record, she will be within striking distance of the overall NCAA mark held by LSU’S Pete Maravich, who finished with 3,667 points. He amassed his points in only three seasons (1967-70) because freshmen of his era weren’t allowed to play on varsity teams.

Woodard and Maravich set their records when college basketball had no 3-point shot.

Francis Marion’s Pearl Moore has the overall record with 4,061 points from 1975 to ’79 at the small-college level in the AIAW. Moore had 177 of her points at Anderson Junior College before enrolling at Francis Marion.

When Stanford’s Tara Vanderveer became the alltime wins leader last month, the NCAA recognized her AIAW wins in the total. The NCAA said in a statement to the Wall Street Journal that it counts PRE-NCAA coaching wins in career totals if the career extended into the NCAA era. For players, the NCAA counts a player’s statistics from a NON-NCAA school if the player ends up spending at least two of three years in the NCAA.

Bluder said the suggestion that Woodard’s points should be counted by the NCAA was “probably a really valid point.”

“We played basketball before the NCAA,” she said, “so I don’t know why we have this, NCAA records. I think that makes really good sense.”

 ?? Matthew Putney The Associated Press ?? Caitlin Clark, second from right, and the rest of the Iowa Hawkeyes can put the circus surroundin­g Clark’s pursuit of the NCAA all-time career scoring record behind them and focus on the remainder of the regular season, before the Big Ten and NCAA tournament­s.
Matthew Putney The Associated Press Caitlin Clark, second from right, and the rest of the Iowa Hawkeyes can put the circus surroundin­g Clark’s pursuit of the NCAA all-time career scoring record behind them and focus on the remainder of the regular season, before the Big Ten and NCAA tournament­s.

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