The Des Moines Register

Hawkeyes to face Holy Cross in NCAA Tournament

- Tyler Tachman Des Moines Register USA TODAY NETWORK who Follow Tyler Tachman on @Tyler_T15, contact via email ttachman@gannett.com. X at

IOWA CITY — For a few days now, Iowa women’s basketball has known when and where it would play its first 2024 NCAA Tournament game.

Now the Hawkeyes know are playing.

In a matchup of 16 seeds, Holy Cross and UT Martin squared off at CarverHawk­eye Arena on Thursday night for the chance to get a shot at the formidable Hawkeyes in the round of 64 of the NCAA Tournament.

Holy Cross earned that opportunit­y, knocking off UT Martin, 72-45.

“This group is so special and we love each other so much,” Holy Cross coach Maureen Magarity said. “We just didn’t want it to end. We didn’t want it to be our last practice. We didn’t want it to be our last shootaroun­d. We didn’t want it to be our last game.”

It was a thorough drubbing by Holy Cross, which came out firing, hitting four 3-pointers by the first media timeout. The Crusaders did not trail for a single second on Thursday.

Holy Cross put on an offensive display, shooting 46% from the field and 38% from deep. Meanwhile, Holy Cross held UT Martin to 26% from the field and 1-of-19 from deep. Entering Thursday, the Crusaders allowed just 56.2 points per game. That number only improved after Thursday’s strong defensive showing.

Holy Cross guard Cara McCormack was phenomenal. She had 23 points, which included knocking down 7-of-10 from deep. She has now scored in double-figures in eight of her last 12 games. they

Another Holy Cross guard, Bronagh Power-Cassidy, also showed flashes of prowess in Thursday’s contest, though it wasn’t very efficient. Power-Cassidy had 15 points on 6-of-15 from the field. She has now scored in double-figures in her last nine games, including at least 30 points twice. During one of those outbursts, she went 7-of-10 from deep.

Thursday’s offensive performanc­e, though, was better than the norm for a Holy Cross team that entered the day averaging under 63 points per game and shooting 32.9% from deep.

But on Thursday, McCormack and Power-Cassidy proved they can score the rock in a high-stakes game. Iowa’s guards, such as Caitlin Clark, Gabbie Marshall and Sydney Affolter, will be tasked with slowing down Holy Cross’ experience­d backcourt.

In her fourth season at the helm, Holy Cross coach Maureen Magarity has done an admirable job with the program. This was the Crusaders’ third consecutiv­e season recording at least 20 wins. Holy Cross’ 24 wins during 2022-23 was the second most in a single season in program history.

“I think something special about our team is that family atmosphere,” McCormack said. “And I feel like it all stems from coach (Magarity). We’re all so close to her. She’s so easy to get along with. And I think just having that close environmen­t with all of our coaches is really important. And I feel like she’s what we all look forward to before games. And I feel like the postseason, and this game especially, she really got us excited and really motivated us.”

This season marks Holy Cross’ second consecutiv­e NCAA Tournament appearance. Last season, the Crusaders fell to Maryland, 93-61.

Holy Cross will get a crack at another Big Ten team in the Big Dance this season after the win over UT Martin. The season has at certain points been turbulent, though. At one point Cross had won nine games in a row. Shortly after, though, the team embarked on a stretch of four losses in a row.

But the Crusaders found their stride at the right time, winning the regularsea­son finale and then three games to capture a Patriot League Tournament title and punch their ticket to the NCAA Tournament.

With Thursday’s victory, the Crusaders now ride a five-game winning streak heading into Saturday’s 2 p.m. matchup (ABC) with Iowa.

“We have to fight and try to figure out ways to just get possession­s,” Magarity said of the matchup with Iowa. “There’s no doubt in my mind we’ll be prepared. This team is ready. And it’s going to be an amazing experience. I think just to have the opportunit­y to play on Saturday, I think, is obviously a dream come true for all of us.”

During the first half of Thursday’s game, a good portion of the Iowa women’s team, including Clark and head coach Lisa Bluder, watched on at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

Clark’s stardom has attracted so much attention, not only to herself but also to the Iowa program as a whole. And yet, the Hawkeyes have managed to live up to almost all expectatio­ns — with the exception of a Big Ten regularsea­son title.

The Hawkeyes currently hold an exceptiona­l 29-4 record. They have built some substantia­l momentum as of late, winning their last six games, three of which came on the way to a Big Ten Tournament title. That includes improbably erasing an eight-point deficit with less than three minutes remaining in regulation during the championsh­ip game against Nebraska.

“I think our players have watched a lot of Caitlin Clark,” Magarity said. “Obviously, we have all of the respect in the world for her and what she’s done for the game of basketball, not only just women’s basketball. Obviously, we have to try to limit her touches. But she’s just one of those one-in-a-million type of players that even if you do that, she’s one of the best passers that I’ve ever seen, as well. So it’s a lot about Caitlin but they are the team they are because of all of the people she can pass to, too.”

But so much of a team’s legacy is defined by its performanc­e in the NCAA Tournament.

There’s a long way to go, but Iowa will try to finish what it couldn’t last season. The Hawkeyes’ magical run to the national championsh­ip game, which included knocking off powerhouse South Carolina, ultimately ended short of their final objective with a loss to LSU.

Can the supporting cast provide enough firepower alongside Clark? If not, can Clark do enough on her own? Will all of the pressure ever reach a breaking point?

The journey to the Final Four in Cleveland figures to be a challenge. But now Iowa knows the full details of where that road starts: vs. Holy Cross at Carver on Saturday.

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