Sad news: South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley Announce Her Resignation and further Explain Decision

South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley Announce Her Resignation and further Explain Decision

In the NCAA women’s final, South Carolina defeated Iowa on Sunday, 87-75, to remain undefeated.

Caitlin Clark’s final game at Iowa was terminated by the Gamecocks victory. In February, Clark broke the 54-year-old record held by the late Pete Maravich to become the all-time NCAA Division I scoring leader. On Sunday, Clark scored thirty points.

Before Sunday’s match, South Carolina was 37-0, making history as the first unbeaten champion since UConn in 2016. According to CBS Sports, they won their third national title overall and their second in the last three years on Sunday.

The Gamecocks won their first game of the season and became the 10th Division I team to do it, thanks to Dawn Staley’s unwavering attack from the sidelines. And they succeeded in doing so despite losing each of the team’s five starters from the previous campaign.

During the news conference following the game, Staley remarked, “I just really want to say congratulations to Iowa and Caitlin for making it back to the national championship game.” “Obviously, they are a formidable opponent that took everything that we had to win the basketball game, but I just don’t want to not utilize this opportunity to thank Caitlin for what she’s done for women’s basketball.”

To help the Hawkeyes win their first title, Clark gave it her all. She finished with 30 points, 18 of which came in the first quarter—a championship record. She is going to be remembered as one of the best players in NCAA history. With 3,951 career points, she became the highest scoring player in NCAA Division I history at Iowa (34-5). She rewrote the record book.

She believes that the millions of new fans she helped attract to the game and the innumerable young girls and boys she inspired will define her legacy more than the fact that she lost two NCAA championship games.

At the conference after the game, Iowa coach Lisa Bluder remarked, “I mean, she has raised the excitement of our sport.” “Merely because she acts in a

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