CLEVELAND — For 10 glorious minutes on Sunday, Caitlin Clark seemed poised to make the impossible possible one last time.
Shots fell. Iowa's offense hummed. And the magic the Hawkeyes' singular star has summoned so often over the last two years while becoming a crossover sensation was at her fingertips.
Then it vanished. Not all at once but little by little.
South Carolina swarmed the Hawkeyes and their unquestioned leader in wave upon wave while pulling away late for an 87-75 victory. The loss — the second Iowa in the national title game in as many years — signaled the end of a remarkable chapter in which the Hawkeyes’ pony-tailed point guard with the limitless range rewrote a significant portion of the NCAA record book and expanded the footprint of the women’s game.
It's been a remarkable ride. One that Clark tried to focus on after falling just short of delivering her home state the championship she's long coveted.
''It's certainly been a special year,'' Clark said. ''To be honest, after last year I was kind of, like, ‘How do we top doing what we did last year?' Somehow, some way, every single person in our locker room believed. To be honest, this year was probably more special than last year.''
Even if the ending was the same.
Clark scored 30 points against South Carolina to boost her career total to 3,951, more than any man or woman in major college basketball history. More was required against the Gamecocks. South Carolina weathered an early flurry from Clark — whose 18 first-quarter points marked a championship game record for most in a single period — before accomplishing what so few have been able to during her ascent: it found a way to slow her down.