South Carolina crowned national champions after beating Caitlin Clark’s Iowa in NCAA title game

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By Maya Cantina

  • DailyMail.com provides all the latest international sports news 

South Carolina has rained on Caitlin Clark’s parade, with the Iowa superstar failing to end her college career on a high with a NCAA championship win ahead of the WNBA Draft later this month, as the Gamecocks are crowned as this year’s national champs.

Guards Tessa Johnson, Kamilla Cardoso, and Te-Hina Paopao combined for 48 points in Sunday’s stunning 87-75 comeback win at Rocket Morgage FieldHouse – home to the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers – to overpower Clark’s own special 30-piece in her last game ever for the Hawkeyes.

Iowa (34-5) came out firing in the first quarter, outscoring their opponents, 27-20, before undefeated South Carolina (38-0) made up for the end-of-quarter, 7-point differential by scoring 29 in the second, while the Hawkeyes only put up 19.

Once the score was in the Gamecocks’ favor at halftime (49-46), they never looked back, despite Clark’s near double-double heroics (8 rebounds), which caused a few nerve-racking moments for Dawn Staley’s team in the fourth.

South Carolina ultimately put 19 points apiece in the last two quarters, while the Hawkeyes had 13 in the third quarter and 16 in the last.

Iowa’s Caitlin Clark stands with her hands on her hips as she came close to winning an NCAA title for a second year in a row

The 22-year-old Clark – NCAA’s all-time leading scorer for both men and women – made 10 of 28 shots – including 5 of 13 3-pointers – and finished her four-year stay in Iowa City with 3,951 points. She also had five assists. 

Despite Sunday’s loss for the Hawkeyes, Clark’s run to a second straight NCAA final helped turn the women’s tournament into appointment television. Her performances have set a new TV ratings record for women’s college basketball twice in the last week alone, with another record likely waiting after the title game. 

She has also tried to take her blossoming stardom in stride, frequently deflecting much of the attention to her Iowa teammates and a sport that is having a moment. 

ᴀʀᴛɪᴄʟᴇ ꜱᴏᴜʀᴄᴇ

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