Iowa Hawkeyes Emerge Triumphant in Epic Rematch Game Against LSU Tigers
Star players Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese faced off in the highly anticipated game
Iowa Hawkeyes beat the Number Three LSU Tigers 94-87 in Albany, New York, during a hard-fought battle in the first round of the Elite Eight of the 2024 NCAA womenâs basketball tournament. The Hawkeyes will advance to the Final Four in Cleveland, where theyâll play the winner of the USC Trojans and Connecticut Huskies game.
Mondayâs highly anticipated showdown reunited star players Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark, whose rivalry has captivated the nation leading up to the big game. While LSU star Reese was dominant in the first half, and finished with 17 points and 20 rebounds, the Tigers struggled to keep the momentum in the second half. Clark dropped 41 points, 12 assists and seven rebounds, while teammates Kate Martin and Sydney Affolter sank in double figures adding 21 and 16, respectively.Â
The night was a a rematch of last yearâs championship game, which saw the Tigers clinch a 102-85 win over the Hawkeyes to claim their first championship in program history â at the time, it was the most-viewed NCAA womenâs basketball final, with nearly 13 million people watching at peak viewership. In the final seconds, when it was evident the Tigers would be taking home the trophy, Reese appeared to taunt Clark by performing John Cenaâs âYou canât see meâ hand move.
The moment ignited a year of heated debates among sports commentators and fans alike over the racial narratives crafted around white players and Black players. Clark had been celebrated for the same move two games prior when Iowa faced off with Louisville. Yet critics were quick to call Reeseâs gesture âclassless,â and in response, many on social media, including professional athletes, called out the racist double standard.
In separate statements during a Sunday press conference, before any player on the Tigers and Hawkeyes stepped foot on the court Monday night, Reese and Clark set the record straight â there was absolutely no beef between them.
âI donât think people realize itâs not personal,â Reese said when asked about trash talking. âOnce we get out between those lines, if I see you walking down the street, itâs like, âHey, girl, whatâs up? Letâs hang out.â I think people just take it like we hate each other. Me and Caitlin Clark donât hate each other. I want everybody to understand that. Itâs just a super-competitive game. Once I get between those lines, thereâs no friends. Iâm going to talk trash to you. Iâm going to do whatever it takes to get in your head the whole entire game, but after the game, we can kick it. I donât think people really realize that.â She said her relationship with Clark is âsuper-competitive,â stating that the two had been playing each other since high school.
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âThereâs definitely that competitive fire,â Clark said. âBoth of us want to win more than anything, and thatâs how it should be when youâre a competitor and you get into a situation like this, whether it was the national championship, whether itâs the Elite Eight.
âI think thatâs the main similarity is how competitive we are,â Clark continued. âWe both grew up loving this game, and weâre going to do anything we can to help our teams win.â
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