Caitlin Clark wasted no time becoming the NCAA womenâs career scoring leader Thursday night, taking less than three minutes to score the eight points she needed to break Kelsey Plumâs record.
The Iowa star who has brought unprecedented attention to womenâs basketball surpassed the record with her signature shot â a 35-foot three-pointer that hit nothing but the bottom of the net.
And Clark didnât let up from there. She finished with a career-high 49 points, tied her career best with nine three-pointers and had 13 assists in No 4 Iowaâs 106-89 victory over Michigan.
Hawkeyes coach Lisa Bluder took Clark out of the game with 1:46 left, shortly after she made her final three, and she went to the bench to an ovation from the sellout crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
Clarkâs huge night put her at 3,569 points and within 80 of her next milestone, Lynette Woodardâs major womenâs college scoring record of 3,649.
Clark went into the game needing eight points to pass Plumâs total of 3,527. The record-breaker was a three off the dribble on the left wing near the Mediacom Court logo with 7:45 left in the first quarter.
âItâs cool. Itâs cool to be in the same realm as a lot of really, really good players,â Clark said at halftime in a televised interview. âIâm lucky to do it because I have really good teammates and really good coaches and a great support system that surrounds me.â
Iowa won the tip and Clark, guarded by Laila Phelia, drove to the basket and banked in a shot from the right side. Clark hit a three from the left wing on Iowaâs next possession. The Hawkeyes turned the ball over twice before Clark took a pass from Gabbie Marshall in transition, stopped and and shot from deep on the left side.
When the ball went through, the fans â many of them standing and holding up phones to capture the moment â let loose a huge roar.
After Clarkâs three, Phelia missed a layup, for Michigan and Iowaâs Molly Davis rebounded. Iowa coach Lisa Bluder called timeout and a celebration ensued. Clark hugged teammates, Bluder and staffers, and the record was acknowledged while delighted fans continued to scream.
âJust grateful. Thankful to be surrounded by people and be in a city that supports womenâs basketball so much,â Clark said. âBe surrounded by my best friends and people that want to see me be great and push me to be great every single day.â
Plum scored 57 points on the night she broke the scoring record in 2017 as a senior at Washington, and Clark played as if she had that on her mind. She had 23 points in the first quarter, making five of her first seven three-pointers and eight of 10 shots overall.
Clark and her dynamic game have captivated the nation for two seasons. Last year, she led the Hawkeyes to the NCAA title game and was named AP player of the year. More than just her pursuit of the record, her long three-pointers and flashy passes have raised interest in the womenâs game to unprecedented levels. Arenas have been sold out for her games, home and away, and television ratings have never been higher.
Itâs all been more than Clark imagined when the 6ft guard from West Des Moines stayed in state and picked Iowa over Notre Dame in November 2019.
âI dreamed of doing really big things, playing in front of big crowds, going to the Final Four, maybe not quite on this level,â Clark said. âI think thatâs really hard to dream. You can always exceed expectations, even your own, and I think thatâs been one of the coolest parts.â
Though her basketball obligations and endorsement deals (State Farm ads, etc) have put demands on her time, she said she is the same person who showed up on campus four years ago.
âI just go about my business as I did when I was a freshman during Covid,â said Clark, a senior who still has another season of eligibility remaining, if she wants it. âSure, my life has kind of changed somewhat. I still live the exact same way. I still act like a 22-year-old college kid.â
She said she still cleans her apartment, does laundry, plays video games, hangs out with friends and does schoolwork.
âThe best way to debrief and get away from things is getting off your phone, getting off social media and enjoying whatâs around you and the people around you and the moments that are happening,â she said.
Her run to the record could have come earlier, but it arrived back at Carver-Hawkeye Arena, where ticket resale prices for the Michigan game ranged from hundreds of dollars into the thousands. Fans again showed up early outside the arena, many wearing black-and-gold No 22 jerseys and holding signs paying homage.
Mya Anderson and her friend, Ellie Steffensen, both 12, and their moms made the six-hour drive from Canton, South Dakota, to see Clark break the record.
âI think sheâs inspired a lot of people,â Mya said.
âYeah, a lot of little girls,â Ellie added.
Mya and Ellie both play basketball, and both said they try to do some of the things Clark does on the court, like shoot long threes.
âBut Iâm not as good as her,â Ellie said.
Kelly Jared of Manchester, Iowa, said she likes everything about Clark and expects her impact on the womenâs game to endure.
âSheâs taken it to a new level,â Jared said. âThe aspirations and goals that the current players and future players have, she has set that bar way up in the sky. And itâs perfect, because they will work to attain them. As as far as the fans, thereâs excitement for the people who never watched womenâs basketball. My son isnât a basketball fan, but he watched Caitlin last year and he was sold. He absolutely loves her.â
Unlike Sundayâs loss at Nebraska, when Fox drew almost 2m viewers for the game, this one was streamed on Peacock.
Clarkâs next target is the all-time major womenâs college scoring record of 3,649 points by Kansas star Lynette Woodard from 1977-81. During Woodardâs era, womenâs sports were governed by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. Pearl Moore of Francis Marion holds the overall womenâs record with 4,061 points from 1975-79.