A homegrown prodigy
In the heart of basketball season, Interstate 88 out of Chicago is flanked by frozen lakes, silent farms and foggy cornfields, a trucker-friendly route with hardly any elevation change. The parking lots at Herbert Hoover’s presidential library in West Branch, Iowa, were nearly empty on a weekday in early January, as were downtown Iowa City’s bars and restaurants during the university’s winter break. Even the souvenir magnets at Eastern Iowa Airport in Cedar Rapids acknowledge the solitude: “What happens in Iowa, stays in Iowa . . . but nothing happens in Iowa.”
Clark has changed that as the home crowds have swelled to more than 15,000 and young girls crowd the court to take photos with her postgame. The state of Iowa has a rich women’s basketball history dating from the 1920s, when teams fielded six players instead of five. An Iowa City boutique sells T-shirts that proclaim the state as the “center of the women’s college basketball universe,” with coastal powerhouses such as Connecticut and Stanford well over 1,000 miles away.
No one here, or anywhere, has seen a player quite like Clark. The 6-foot floor general has driven record television ratings for the Big Ten Network and received social media shout-outs from NBA stars LeBron James and Kevin Durant, who appreciate her refined game, showmanship and competitiveness in the face of double teams, traps, full-court presses and junk defenses.
“When you couple her edge with her skills and her IQ, that’s what takes her over the top and makes her rare,” Durant said in a telephone interview. “She can pretty much do everything on the floor, score from any angle, shoot deep threes and create for her teammates. But she has that feisty side to her. She has that dog in her, as people call it. She’s trying to do everything for her team because she can’t lose.”
Clark’s athletic gifts and drive were obvious to her sports-obsessed extended family from an early age. Her father, Brent, played baseball and basketball at Division III Simpson College; her older brother, Blake, played football at Iowa State; and several of her cousins have played collegiate sports.
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Brent, a sales executive at Concentric International, and Anne, a former marketing executive, wasted no time enrolling their young daughter in a local boys’ basketball league. Before long, an angry parent from an opposing team, who was upset after a blowout loss, went to the league’s director to demand that Clark’s team forfeit because she is a girl. The request was denied, and Clark was named the league MVP at the end of the season.
“They were really [upset] about how a girl could beat all these boys,” Clark said. “I definitely deserved MVP. It wasn’t a pity award.”
Around that same time, Clark’s first-grade teacher phoned the family to discuss the results of a timed math challenge. Clark had finished second in her class, and she was devastated. The teacher offered advice that never stuck: “Caitlin needs to relax.”
Clark's intensity carries over from the court to the weight room. (Matthew Holst for The Washington Post)
Coaches and teammates insist that Clark doesn't always have a serious demeanor. (Matthew Holst for The Washington Post)
When Clark was a third-grader, her father drove her to watch the WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx in Minneapolis, and she briefly met Maya Moore. Too excited to ask for an autograph or a selfie, Clark settled for a bear hug — an embrace she now credits as the moment she fell in love with basketball. The Clarks stoked their daughter’s burgeoning hoop dreams by gathering her siblings and cousins together in the laundry room, turning off all the lights and holding mock player introductions, complete with flashlights to mimic an arena’s spotlight.
Recruiting letters began hitting the mailbox when Clark was a seventh-grader, though her parents shielded her from the attention until she was a high school sophomore in hopes of preserving a normal childhood. The handwritten notes and promotional posters eventually filled two oversized Tupperware tubs.
Clark is preparing to lead her team into the NCAA tournament for the third time in three seasons. (Matthew Holst for The Washington Post)
By the time Clark was 13, she had switched to girls-only leagues and was playing up several grade levels in search of better competition. With no interest in video games, she hit tennis balls against the garage, threw tight spirals with her father and lobbied her parents for a full-size basketball court in the backyard. They compromised by placing a hoop above the garage and by extending the driveway so she could spray paint a three-point line at the appropriate distance.
Battling wind gusts that buffeted her shots, Clark honed her three-point range. Her father rebounded and encouraged proper shooting form from all distances. To compensate for her skinny frame, Clark studied Moore, James and Durant to see how they used their bodies to finish in traffic. Playing soccer helped her see passing angles, as did grainy YouTube video of Pete Maravich.
The Dowling Maroons played a fast-paced style, and they turned Clark loose as a freshman starter. She dropped soccer after her sophomore year so she could focus on basketball year-round, given that she was juggling her school team, her All-Iowa Attack AAU commitments and invites from USA Basketball. In time, she racked up all-state and McDonald’s all-American honors, and she was named Iowa’s Miss Basketball in 2020.
“The student sections loved to chant ‘Overrated!’ at me,” Clark said. “It brings out your best. I laughed.”
Clark led the state in scoring as a junior and senior but graduated without winning a state title. Her high school career ended with a stunning upset loss to Sioux City East in the regional finals.
“I can still see her,” Brent Clark said. “She crumbled and fell to the floor. She came to me not long after the game and was kind of tearful. I said to her that she had a fabulous career. She was the first one in the line to congratulate the other team. The next morning, she was up and at a 7 a.m. faith-based discussion group. No matter who you are, that’s hard to do.”
Clark has rocketed to stardom playing for Iowa. (Charlie Neibergall/AP)