The show-stopping Caitlin Clark came through when it mattered most Sunday. The Big Ten tournament’s most outstanding player hit a go-ahead shot, a step-back three-pointer that put Iowa ahead for good in overtime. The basket highlighted a 34-point performance in which she also had 12 assists, seven rebounds and three steals.
Clark’s key three-pointer in the Hawkeyes’ 94-89 victory over Nebraska was a reminder that, even on her worst shooting days, college basketball’s all-time leading scorer can take over a game at any time. However, she would not have been able to provide her late-game heroics without standout games from her supporting cast.
Clark began the game 2-for-13 from the field, including 0-of-9 from three-point range. Despite her struggles, Iowa remained within striking distance, trailing by 11 points after its lowest-scoring first half of the tournament. Hannah Stuelke, who finished with 25 points and nine rebounds overall, paced the Hawkeyes with 11 points in the first half, and Gabbie Marshall hit a pair of threes and provided strong on-ball defense.
Shortly after halftime, Clark made her first three-pointer of the game, but her teammates weren’t content to let her play hero ball. Instead, they complemented the Big Ten player of the year to perfection, igniting a comeback that tied Nebraska through both the third and fourth quarters.
As the game got down to crunch time, the supporting cast made clutch plays to help propel Iowa to victory.
Nebraska made several attempts to pull away. Early in the fourth, Natalie Potts took the lead back for the Cornhuskers with a three-pointer, but Clark immediately found a running Stuelke in transition by threading the needle on a full-court pass. The same thing happened a few minutes later after a three by Clark cut an eight-point deficit to five with just more than two minutes left in regulation. She then threw the ball down the court to Stuelke for a fast-break bucket, and 34 seconds later, sixth-year player Kate Martin made another massive Hawkeyes three-pointer to bring Iowa to within two.