HONORABLE MENTION: **IUPUI 74 IOWA 73 – Pre – Christmas, 2021; **LSU 102 IOWA 85 – 2023 NCAA Tournament Championship Game; **IOWA 94 DePaul 72 – “Crossover at Kinnick” exhibition – Fall of 2023; **ANY of the 1st – round games of either the B.T.T. or the NCAA Tournaments – any year.
These games have virtually nothing in common with each other. Admittedly, one is a real eye–opener. But this is the quickest summary of what Iowa women’s basketball has been through, including a pair of games that showed just how far we’ve come in the Caitlin Clark era.
I included the IUPUI game because of what the reality was in Clark’s freshman season, especially early on. This game took place during Christmas break when there were no students on campus. Tickets for this game literally sold for $1. And a set of curtains were extended at C.H.A. to make the arena look fuller than it was (attendance – <5,000). And back in those days, even games like this occasionally ended as (shocking) losses – and games against respectable teams in their gyms were almost certain losses. That was where this saga began.
But after that, look at what happened. There was so much success that the eight first–round games in the Big Ten and NCAA tournaments were blowouts that were reduced to “also–ran” status on this list. The girls expected to win – and win big in those games. And they usually did.
And their success was so amazing that two really, really notable games could not crack the “top 25”. Admittedly, the “Crossover at Kinnick” maybe should’ve made the list, as it was groundbreaking in SO many ways. Ok, national champions in several women’s sports want to expand their base by having special events like this. But this exhibition was a tribute to fans who just could not get enough of watching this team – which by year’s end spanned the entire country. But it is on this list because it was only an exhibition game.
Sadly, just like three Rose Bowls could only make “honorable mention” in the greatest ever games in the Hayden Fry era, a national championship game had to be added to this list. It’s not that it wasn’t historic (as the final list will clearly show). It’s just that this game, after what MUST go down as one of the greatest upsets in the history of women’s college basketball, wasn’t much of a game. Still, in the next section, there is a tribute to this game.
And the two losses in the championship game were a good reminder of what it takes to become the nation’s true #1. It’s more than just being a – or even THE top team. On three consecutive weekends, you have to win two games against top teams. Usually those games are a good 48 hrs. apart. But on the championship weekends in both 2023 and ’24, women’s college basketball had not (yet) been given elite Sunday placements. Which meant, especially if you were the second game late on Friday night (and Iowa was both times), your time between games was exceedingly short – not good for a team that spent so much to win their semi–final games and also only had a really short bench. But even if the fuel and depth needed to win was just plain not there on two Sundays, the ladies proved with a pair of Friday night wins how good they were – and hence cemented our pride for the team.
These games have virtually nothing in common with each other. Admittedly, one is a real eye–opener. But this is the quickest summary of what Iowa women’s basketball has been through, including a pair of games that showed just how far we’ve come in the Caitlin Clark era.
I included the IUPUI game because of what the reality was in Clark’s freshman season, especially early on. This game took place during Christmas break when there were no students on campus. Tickets for this game literally sold for $1. And a set of curtains were extended at C.H.A. to make the arena look fuller than it was (attendance – <5,000). And back in those days, even games like this occasionally ended as (shocking) losses – and games against respectable teams in their gyms were almost certain losses. That was where this saga began.
But after that, look at what happened. There was so much success that the eight first–round games in the Big Ten and NCAA tournaments were blowouts that were reduced to “also–ran” status on this list. The girls expected to win – and win big in those games. And they usually did.
And their success was so amazing that two really, really notable games could not crack the “top 25”. Admittedly, the “Crossover at Kinnick” maybe should’ve made the list, as it was groundbreaking in SO many ways. Ok, national champions in several women’s sports want to expand their base by having special events like this. But this exhibition was a tribute to fans who just could not get enough of watching this team – which by year’s end spanned the entire country. But it is on this list because it was only an exhibition game.
Sadly, just like three Rose Bowls could only make “honorable mention” in the greatest ever games in the Hayden Fry era, a national championship game had to be added to this list. It’s not that it wasn’t historic (as the final list will clearly show). It’s just that this game, after what MUST go down as one of the greatest upsets in the history of women’s college basketball, wasn’t much of a game. Still, in the next section, there is a tribute to this game.
And the two losses in the championship game were a good reminder of what it takes to become the nation’s true #1. It’s more than just being a – or even THE top team. On three consecutive weekends, you have to win two games against top teams. Usually those games are a good 48 hrs. apart. But on the championship weekends in both 2023 and ’24, women’s college basketball had not (yet) been given elite Sunday placements. Which meant, especially if you were the second game late on Friday night (and Iowa was both times), your time between games was exceedingly short – not good for a team that spent so much to win their semi–final games and also only had a really short bench. But even if the fuel and depth needed to win was just plain not there on two Sundays, the ladies proved with a pair of Friday night wins how good they were – and hence cemented our pride for the team.