Miami Herald

Caitlin Clark, Iowa overpower LSU for an NCAA Final Four berth

- BY JAMI FARKAS Field Level Media

ALBANY, N.Y.

This year, Caitlin Clark and Iowa would not be denied by LSU.

Clark scored 41 points and had 12 assists as the top-seeded Hawkeyes defeated the third-seeded Tigers 94-87 on Monday in the Albany 2 Region final to advance to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament.

The game was a rematch of the 2023 national final, won 102-85 by LSU.

“Being so close last year, that’s what just drives you,” Clark said. “We don’t want this to end.”

At the Final Four in Cleveland on Friday, Iowa will take on third-seeded UConn, which beat No. 1 Southern California 80-73 later Monday to lock up the Portland 3 Region. Tipoff is set for 9 p.m.

In the other semifinal, at 7 p.m., NC State will face South Carolina. Both games are on ESPN. The championsh­ip game will be at 3 p.m. Sunday on ABC.

The rematch between the Hawkeyes and Tigers was highly anticipate­d since the regional brackets were unveiled just over two weeks ago, and it didn’t disappoint. Clark and LSU star Angel Reese – the two memorably jawed at each other in the 2023 title game – each turned in standout performanc­es, with Clark bolstered by a strong game from the whole Iowa lineup.

Kate Martin scored 21 points for the Hawkeyes (33-4), and Sydney Affolter added 16.

Flau’jae Johnson had a team-high 23 points for LSU (31-6), and Reese finished with 17 points and a game-high 20 rebounds before fouling out with 1:45 left. Mikaylah Williams contribute­d 18 points, and Aneesah Morrow scored 14 and pulled down 14 boards.

Clark, the NCAA’s alltime leading scorer in Division I history (women’s and men’s), set another record in the win. With her 3-pointer at the 5:09 mark of the third quarter, her seventh of the game, Clark broke the record set by Oklahoma’s Taylor Robertson last season for most career threes made (537).

The capacity crowd in Albany had a decidedly pro-Iowa flavor, cheering wildly for the Hawkeyes throughout.

The game was frenetic from the start, with the teams putting up points in a flurry. That’s no surprise: Iowa entered as the nation’s top-scoring team at 91.9 points per game, with LSU second at 85.9.

With Hailey Van Lith guarding her, Clark scored five quick points as the Hawkeyes took a 9-4 lead. After Van Lith went out at the 7:28 mark of the first quarter, Clark scored a 3-pointer off a turnover to put Iowa up by eight.

But with Last-Tear Poa guarding her, Clark had fewer clean looks, allowing the Tigers to close the gap, and LSU ended the quarter on a 10-0 run – including three layups by Reese – to take a 31-26 lead.

A Van Lith three to open the second period extended the lead to eight, but Clark then went to work, scoring eight points to help Iowa erase the deficit, sending the teams to the locker room tied at 45.

Iowa was relentless in the third quarter, with Clark scoring 12 points and the Hawkeyes outpacing the Tigers 24-13 to take control of the game, ending the period up 6958.

“We started the game and we started the third quarter with a punch,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said.

And it was Clark who provided that punch after halftime with a 3-pointer to put Iowa ahead 48-45.

“She came out with a different look in her eye,” Bluder said of Clark after the half.

Rebounding kept the Tigers in the game, as they outperform­ed the Hawkeyes 54-36 in rebounds and scored 44 points in the paint.

Clark was 9-for-20 from long distance, tying the record for most 3-pointers in a game in Women’s NCAA Tournament history.

Wednesday’s Championsh­ip

Illinois vs. Villanova, 7

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