Iowa coach eviscerates NCAA after Caitlin Clark breaks another record

Iowa coach eviscerates NCAA after Caitlin Clark breaks another record

Caitlin Clark notched another milestone on her way to the top of the scoring charts Wednesday — and this is the one deserved more attention, according to Iowa coach Lisa Bluder.

The Iowa sharpshooter scored 33 points in the Hawkeyes’ 108-60 win over Minnesota. Clark surpassed Lynette Woodard for the major college scoring record with 3,650 points.

Bluder celebrated Clark’s milestone but took a shot at the NCAA for not recognizing Woodard’s mark as the top scorer in women’s college basketball. Woodard played for the Kansas Jayhawks in the AIAW era — before the NCAA began sanctioning women’s basketball.

“Tonight is the night of the real record,” Bluder said. “For some reason the NCAA does not want to recognize the basketball that was played prior to 1982, and that’s wrong. We played basketball back then. They just don’t want to recognize it, and that hurts the rest of us who were playing at that time. There’s no reason why that should not be the true record.”

Clark and the school celebrated when she surpassed Kelsey Plum for the all-time Division 1 record. Plum totaled 3,527 points all time at Washington. Woodard scored 3,649 points from 1977-81.

Caitlin Clark broke the all-time women’s scoring record on Feb. 28, 2024. AP Iowa coach Lisa Bluder ripped the NCAA on Caitlin Clark’s record-setting night. AP

“Maybe the NCAA will realize that now. Maybe it will be brought to their attention, and they will start recognizing those women who played in the ’70s,” Bluder said. “Remember, they played with a larger basketball and no 3-point line either.”

Clark recognized Woodard as well.

“I’m just really thankful and grateful to have those players who have come before me. Yeah, it’s super special. Obviously, she’s one of the best all-time,” she said. “It just still shows the room that we have to improve, and where women’s sports is going is a really great place.”

Caitlin Clark led Iowa to the win over Minnesota. Getty Images

Clark just sits 17 points behind LSU men’s basketball star Pete Maravich for the all-time scoring record in NCAA men’s and women’s basketball. He scored 3,667 points during his time at LSU.

Pearl Moore, of Francis Marion, has the overall women’s collegiate record with 4,061 points at the small-college level in AIAW. She had 177 points in junior college before enrolling at Francis Marion.

Caitlin Clark signs autographs for fans after Iowa’s win. Getty Images

Woodard told ESPN on Monday the NCAA is doing the pre-1981 players a disservice.

“They should respect the history. Include us and our accomplishments,” Woodard said. “This is the era of diversity, equity and inclusion. They should include us. We deserve it.”