Las Vegas Review-Journal

Woodard shows bad timing

Former Kansas star has point, but wrong time picked to make it

- By Sam Mcdowell

LKANSAS CITY, Mo. YNETTE WOODARD has a point. But what a time to make it. On a weekend more people watched women’s college basketball than, well, ever, Woodard argued that a primary reason for the large audience — Iowa star Caitlin Clark — needs an asterisk by her scoring record.

Those weren’t her exact words, but that’s precisely what she was suggesting.

Woodard, a pioneer of the game who set the women’s all-time scoring record while at the University of Kansas from 1977-81, said — a day before the NCAA national championsh­ip game — that she believes she remains the true owner of that record.

The crux of her argument is no longer that she scored more points than Clark before the NCAA oversaw women’s sports — a completely valid case that even Iowa coach Lisa Bluder made back when it was accurate earlier this year — but rather the respective manner in which she and Clark scored those points.

“I’ll just go ahead and get the elephant out of the room — I don’t think my record has been broken, because you can’t duplicate what you’re not duplicatin­g,” Woodard told those in attendance at the Women’s Basketball Coaches Associatio­n in Cleveland, referring to her record as “hidden from everyone” for 43 years. “Unless you come with a men’s basketball and a 2-point shot, hey, you know.”

“You can help me spread that word,” she added.

She might be right, come to think of it. But isn’t it pretty hard to compare eras in any sport? Baseball lowered its mound and extended its season. Football bent its rules to aid quarterbac­ks and offenses. Basketball adopted the 3-point line.

But, well, what are we even doing? The points aren’t the point.

Women’s basketball has never before received this kind of deserved promotion — an overdue and momentous opportunit­y for a brighter future. But so much of the surroundin­g noise seems to have the opposite objective: demotion.

That’s not just a reference to the comments from Woodard, which she attempted to walk back on social media 24 hours later. It’s also a reference to the male talking heads who are unworthy of mention by name here (and those with political takes that are equally unworthy of specific mention).

Look, it has to be frustratin­g for Woodard, certainly, that Clark reached 3,951 career points during Iowa’s loss to South Carolina in the national championsh­ip game on Sunday. That 302 more than the 3,649 Woodard scored for KU, and Clark had the advantage of the 3-pointer.

The Hawkeyes superstar made 548 3s during her career. Woodard made zero.

It has to be just as frustratin­g to Woodard that Clark has played with a spotlight that was purposeful­ly and embarrassi­ngly denied Woodard and those of her era.

But the root of Woodard’s unprompted remarks — that’s a key point here, as she was not responding with honesty to a question, but rather eager to voice this take — is that her record was hidden for four decades.

So the solution is to, uh, hide Clark’s record now, too?

For what purpose?

It was a terrific weekend for women’s college basketball. The Final Four and championsh­ip game were the best arguments that the sport should have received this kind of TV exposure long before Clark came along. Like, you know, back when Woodard played.

This season revealed the greatness of the sport. Why hide any aspect of that now?

Whatever you think of Clark and her place in women’s basketball history, we can all agree that she is as responsibl­e as anyone in recent memory for bringing the game a larger audience. Heck, indirectly, Clark’s ascendance has also connected Woodard’s accomplish­ments to a larger audience — maybe even bigger than when she was playing.

It’s unfortunat­e that’s true, no doubt. But Iowa embraced this by inviting Woodard to Clark’s senior day game, and Woodard embraced it by traveling to Iowa City for a gracious pass-the-torch scene complete with a standing ovation.

The sport needs more of those moments.

This season could supply a foundation, and South Carolina coach Dawn Staley is every bit the piece of that foundation that Clark is. Woodard is proof that the game has long needed that foundation — it’s disappoint­ing how many learned her name for the first time through the accomplish­ment of a player 43 years later.

 ?? Matthew Holst Getty Images ?? Iowa’s Caitlin Clark finished her collegiate career with 548 3-pointers, a shot not available when Lynette Woodard was setting scoring records four decades earlier.
Matthew Holst Getty Images Iowa’s Caitlin Clark finished her collegiate career with 548 3-pointers, a shot not available when Lynette Woodard was setting scoring records four decades earlier.

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