Are early women’s March Madness upsets becoming more common?

Date:

Creighton coach Jim Flanery had a simple message for his team headed into the 2022 women’s NCAA tournament, as a No. 10 seed playing on the road and a possible game against No. 2 seed Iowa and Caitlin Clark looming.

“We’re going to Iowa City to win two games,” Flanery told his team.

He knew the odds and history were against them, but someone had to instill belief the Bluejays could do it. Since women’s college basketball went back to playing first- and second-round games on home courts in 2015, top-two seeds had gone 74-4 at home. Of the four that pulled the upset, only one was a double-digit seed.

To win two games in Iowa City, the Bluejays would have to pull two upsets. First up: an 84-74 win over No. 7 seed Colorado in the first round. Up next: the Hawkeyes, playing on their home court, in front of nearly 15,000 fans, with the Clark effect in full swing. She had won her first Big Ten Player of the Year award as a sophomore that season, leading the nation in scoring at 27 points per game.

Flanery felt confident going into the game because Creighton had more familiarity with Clark than most teams. Sure enough, the Bluejays slowed her…

Read more…

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Latest News

More like this
Related

Barcelona’s new third kit inspired by women’s team success

Chris Wright, Toe Poke writerSep 17, 2024, 04:44 AM...

8 burning questions heading into Wild training camp: John Hynes one-on-one

Minnesota Wild coach John Hynes’ summer was longer than...

5 WSL players to watch ahead of new season as Lucy Bronze makes return

Bronze is back in the Women's Super League following...