Current:Home > NewsRough game might be best thing for Caitlin Clark, Iowa's March Madness title aspirations -NextFrontier Finance
Rough game might be best thing for Caitlin Clark, Iowa's March Madness title aspirations
View
Date:2025-04-13 12:27:28
If Caitlin Clark and Iowa get back to the Final Four, remember this game.
It’s easy to win when everything is going right. When college basketball’s all-time leading scorer is draining buckets and hitting logo 3s. When a top-seeded team is impervious to both rust and the free-wheeling abandon of a 16 seed.
This wasn’t that kind of game. Clark couldn’t buy a bucket for most of the night while, early on, the Hawkeyes’ offense sputtered like a car left out in the dead of an Iowa winter. Hannah Stuelke, Iowa’s second-leading scorer, was under the weather and played just 10 minutes.
Holy Cross, meanwhile, didn’t get the memo that 16 seeds are supposed to go away quietly, trailing by just two points after the first quarter.
But Iowa is a veteran group that has designs on going one step further than it did last year, when it lost to LSU in the NCAA championship game. It’s games like these, adversity like this, that establishes the foundation necessary for deep runs in March and April.
FOLLOW THE MADNESS: NCAA basketball bracket, scores, schedules, teams and more.
“I think the first quarter frustrated maybe all of us. This is a game you want to come out and dominate from the start because this is what fuels your run,” Clark said.
“I was a little frustrated,” she added, “but I feel like that comes from knowing what it takes to be where we want to be.”
How Iowa responded should give Clark and her teammates confidence that they do have what it takes, that they can survive the inevitable rough patches they’ll encounter over the next several weeks.
After that first quarter, they stomped their foot on the gas and wound up winning by 26 points, 91-65, despite Clark and Kate Martin not playing for almost half the fourth quarter.
Though Clark was 8 of 19 from the floor, she still had 27 points. Flirted with a triple-double, too, finishing with 10 assists and eight rebounds. And though she wasn’t hitting, her teammates were. Three other players finished in double figures, led by Martin’s double-double of 15 points and 14 rebounds.
Gabbie Marshall — or Gabbie “Marchall,” as Martin called her, referencing her accuracy from 3-point range late last year — was at it again, going 3 of 7 from deep. And Addison O’Grady, who came off the bench because Stuelke was sick, had a season-high 14 points — 10 over her average — and five rebounds.
“We have high expectations for ourselves so we’re not super pleased with every single quarter,” Martin said. “I’m proud of the way we responded in a lot of situations tonight.”
To win a title, or even just get to the Final Four, you need talent. Obviously. You also need a couple of breaks.
But more than anything, you need to find ways to win when the game isn’t coming easily or your backs are against the wall. If you’re lucky, that’s what the early rounds in the tournament give you, stress tests to find your weaknesses and fixes for them.
Clark mentioned several times after the game that she needs to “smile more.” No woman athlete should ever feel required to do that. We get told that enough in our daily lives.
But Clark’s frustration was evident to everyone watching the game, and better, more experienced teams will exploit that if it happens again deeper into the tournament. Now she knows, or is reminded, that she needs to mask her emotions better.
Iowa hadn’t played since the Big Ten Tournament title game almost two weeks ago, and it showed early in the Hawkeyes’ anemic offense. But when they cranked up their defense in the second quarter — they held Holy Cross to nine points and harassed them into 1-of-12 shooting — the offense began to flow.
“That’s one of the best parts of this team. We always are in a game, no matter what the situation is,” Clark said. “I think that just speaks to our offensive firepower. When we’re able to string stops together, that’s when our offense really thrives.”
Another lesson to remember.
“I’m happy with it. I’m not going to ever complain about a 26-point victory,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said. “Of course the first quarter, we were a little bit rusty but I thought we got it going after that. Our 3-point defense was really good and that was key for us. We did a really good job on the boards. We got great paint points, took advantage of some of those things.
“So yeah, I’m cautiously optimistic.”
Tough games often reveal more about a team than easy blowouts. Clark and Iowa need to remember what they learned against Holy Cross. They can't afford to take that class again.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- See Every Bachelor Nation Star Who Made Gerry Turner and Theresa Nist's Wedding Guest List
- Nevada GOP congressional candidate leaves tight US House race to defend her state Assembly seat
- New year, new clothes: expert advice to how to start a gentleman's wardrobe
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- TGI Fridays closes 36 locations in 12 states: See the list
- Trump asks Supreme Court to overturn Colorado ruling barring him from primary ballot
- Students march in Prague to honor the victims of the worst mass killing in Czech history
- 51-year-old Andy Macdonald puts on Tony Hawk-approved Olympic skateboard showing
- Stock market today: Global shares mostly slip, while oil prices advance
Ranking
- Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
- Over a week after pregnant Texas teen Savanah Soto and boyfriend Matthew Guerra killed, a father and son have been arrested
- Founding member of experimental rock band Mr. Bungle suspected of killing girlfriend in California
- Casey Anthony's Dad Answers Questions About Caylee's Death During On-Camera Lie Detector Test
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Gunman dead after multiple people shot at Perry High School in Iowa: Live updates
- NFL Week 18 picks: Will Texans or Colts complete final push into playoffs?
- 'Elvis Evolution': Elvis Presley is back, as a hologram, in new virtual reality show
Recommendation
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Where the Republican presidential candidates stand on the economy
Body found in freezer at San Diego home may have been woman missing for years, police say
America's workers are owed more than $163 million in back pay. See if you qualify.
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Bachelor Nation's Adam Gottschalk Says Bryan Abasolo Put All He Could Into Rachel Lindsay Marriage
Former Harvard president Claudine Gay speaks out about her resignation in New York Times op-ed
New York City subway train derails in collision with another train, injuring more than 20 people