Current:Home > MarketsCaitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers have been in each other’s orbit for years. The Final Four beckons -AssetPath
Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers have been in each other’s orbit for years. The Final Four beckons
View
Date:2025-04-24 22:50:21
CLEVELAND (AP) — Their memories are blurry.
Of AAU tournaments and Team USA practices. Of gold medals and deep 3s. Of the girl with the brown ponytail with the unlimited range who always seemed to know what was coming next and the blonde who never got rattled with the ball in her hands, by opponents or the sea of eyes constantly transfixed on her.
Yet ask Iowa’s Caitlin Clark and UConn’s Paige Bueckers their earliest impression of the other and you get generalities, light on details if heavy on respect.
Maybe because those years shadowing each other on the travel circuit across the Midwest or teaming up for the occasional international competition seem so long ago. Maybe because in some ways — in the most meaningful of ways — they are.
The NCAA Tournament that Clark grew up watching in Iowa and Bueckers took in from the outskirts of Minneapolis doesn’t exist anymore. Back then, the inequalities between the men’s and women’s versions of March Madness were massive, from facilities to swag to TV ratings, even the branding.
It’s not that way anymore.
Not with Clark and Iowa selling out everywhere they go. Not with Bueckers finally healthy after spending the better part of two years recovering from knee injuries that left her fearful the generational skills that made her the first freshman to win the AP Player of the Year award would never return.
Only they have. Just in time for the two players who have helped propel interest in the women’s tournament to an all-time high to take center stage.
When Clark and the top-seeded Hawkeyes face Bueckers and third-seeded UConn on Friday night in the Final Four, they’ll do it not in some anonymous gym with nothing but parents, scouts and college coaches watching.
They will play in front of a packed arena with millions watching on television and millions more keeping track on social media, an ever-growing group that includes LeBron James and Steph Curry and Luka Doncic and aspiring ballers from all over.
It’s not that women’s basketball hasn’t had stars before. It has. Just never quite as many as this who play quite like this.
And while Iowa coach Lisa Bluder made it a point on Thursday to say she didn’t want the national semifinal to be pitted as “Caitlin vs. Paige,” everyone else involved seems to be OK with the arrangement because of what it means for not just their respective teams, but the women’s game in general.
“It’s a star-driven society that we live in,” UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. “It’s a celebrity-driven, star-driven, influencer-driven world that’s been created.”
One in which both Clark and Bueckers are comfortable traveling, perhaps because it’s the only world they’ve ever known.
BIRD VS. MAGIC 2.0? YES AND NO
The parallels to the rivalry between Magic Johnson and Larry Bird that began when Johnson and Michigan State faced Bird and Indiana State in the 1979 NCAA championship are obvious.
“All of a sudden those two particular players came on and it just lit everything up, and it just took off from there,” Auriemma said. “So it needs some stars. It needs people that have the right personality, the right game. And we have that now.”
Thing is, Bueckers and Clark don’t view themselves as rivals. Not in a traditional sense. If anything, they believe they’re simply riding the crest of a wave that’s been building for years, long before they reached a first-name-only level of fame.
Ask Clark why interest in women’s basketball has spiked and she doesn’t point to her record-setting career or her “did she really shoot that” range or even her team’s success but simple exposure.
To Clark, the women’s game has always been great. It’s just taken a while, a long while, for the world to catch up.
“It’s the platforms that (we’re able to have now) that should have been there for a really long time,” Clark said. “We’ve had some amazing talents come through our game, over the last 10, 20 years.”
Talents that haven’t quite connected in the way that Clark and Bueckers have connected. The easing of rules surrounding name, image and likeness compensation has allowed them to market themselves and their game in ways once unimaginable.
FOLLOWING LEGENDS
It’s a history not lost on either of them. They understand and embrace the responsibility of being a role model, knowing they were once on the other end, looking up to the likes of college and WNBA stars Maya Moore and Lindsay Whalen.
“They were everything that I wanted to be like,” Bueckers said. “And they won.”
A trait that has followed Bueckers seemingly from the first time she picked up a ball. It’s telling that when asked about Bueckers’ game, Clark didn’t talk about her impeccable court vision or precise midrange jumper but what the scoreboard says after nearly every game in which she plays.
“She’s always been dominant,” Clark said. “Every team that she’s ever been on, she’s led them to great success. It’s just what she does. She’s a winner.”
That hasn’t changed, though the dynamics around the way Clark and Bueckers are perceived have flipped over the last three years.
ROLE REVERSAL
It was Bueckers, not Clark, who was the top recruit in the Class of 2020. It was Bueckers, not Clark, who was recruited by the Huskies, though Auriemma did point out this week “if Caitlin really wanted to come to UConn, she would have called me.” It was Bueckers, not Clark, who won that first meeting in 2021 and became the “media darling,” as Bueckers put it Friday.
Clark is in that position now. Setting the NCAA Division I scoring record and playing with a fearlessness that is equal parts thrilling and accessible will do that.
Security people had to clear a path deep inside Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on Friday to make sure she could make it from one media opportunity to the next. When UConn and Bueckers came through an hour later, the throng was half the size.
Even for a player who says on the court she can see things before they happen, it’s been a lot. The 22-year-old Clark welcomes the attention because she understands it has brought new people to her sport. Yet she’s not here to be The Star, as much as people want to thrust that moniker on her.
Three years ago, it was Bueckers. The last two years, it’s been her. Next spring it might be Bueckers during her redshirt senior season. Bueckers is leaning toward this year’s blockbuster freshman class, a group that includes USC’s JuJu Watkins or Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo. A decade from now, it might be some young woman who didn’t pick up a ball until she watched Clark hoist it from deep and Bueckers weave through traffic in the lane.
In that way, Clark doesn’t see herself or Bueckers as the end result of something, but simply the latest links in a chain growing ever stronger with each passing season.
“It doesn’t need to be one end-all, be-all (star) just like I think there doesn’t need to be one end-all, be-all team,” Clark said. “The young talent, it’s only going to get better.”
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket/ and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness
veryGood! (575)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Owners of St. Louis nursing home that closed abruptly face federal fine of more than $55,000
- Parent company of Outback Steakhouse, other popular restaurants plans to close 41 locations
- Congressional leaders strike deal on government funding as shutdown looms
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- A 911 call claiming transportation chief was driving erratically was ‘not truthful,” police say
- Horoscopes Today, February 29, 2024
- Richard Lewis, comedian and Curb Your Enthusiasm star, dies at age 76
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Susan Lucci Reveals the 3 Foods She Eats Every Day After Having Multiple Heart Operations
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Better than advertised? Dodgers' $325 million ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto dominates MLB debut
- Are NBA teams taking too many 3-pointers? Yes, according to two Syracuse professors
- Who might replace Mitch McConnell? An early look at the race for the next Senate GOP leader
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Congressional leaders strike deal on government funding as shutdown looms
- Very 1st print version of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone sold at auction for more than $13,000
- WWE Wrestling Star Michael Virgil Jones Dead at 61
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Virginia lawmakers defeat ‘second look’ bill to allow inmates to ask court for reduced sentences
NYC’s plan to ease gridlock and pump billions into mass transit? A $15 toll for Manhattan drivers
Kansas City Chiefs superfan 'ChiefsAholic' pleads guilty to bank robberies
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
How gun accessories called bump stocks ended up before the U.S. Supreme Court
Google CEO Pichai says Gemini's AI image results offended our users
WWE Wrestling Star Michael Virgil Jones Dead at 61