The Iowa women’s basketball program will forever be distinguished by the periods before and after Caitlin Clark. And the post-CC era (also the post-head coach Lisa Bluder era) is still going just fine.
The week the Hawkeyes entered the top 10 of the Associated Press Top 25 poll for the first time since Clark went to the WNBA in 2024, and they backed up that position with wins over then-ranked No. 15 Maryland and No. 12 Ohio State. Including the win over then-No. 15 Michigan State the week prior, Iowa is on a three-game win streak over ranked opponents and an eight-game win streak overall.
Advertisement
While reigning Big Ten champion UCLA (19-1, 9-0) floated through the first half of its Big Ten schedule, Iowa (18-2, 9-0) quietly built itself up as the Bruins’ toughest challenger. The Hawkeyes will make their Los Angeles swing this weekend in what will be one of — if not the — most crucial matchups of the Big Ten season. Iowa faces USC (11-9, 3-6) on Thursday (9 p.m. ET, Peacock) and No. 2 UCLA on Sunday (4 p.m. ET, Fox).
Iowa is 9-0 in conference play for the first time since 1996 — six years before Clark was even born — and defeated three consecutive AP Top 25 teams for the first time in program history. They’re 5-2 against AP opponents, taking losses to in-state rival and then-No. 10 Iowa State, 74-69, and No. 1 UConn, 90-64. It stands as the third-closest margin of UConn’s season, a note that says more about the Huskies’ domination than Iowa’s flaws.
There aren’t many of those at this point in the season, particularly as Iowa is understanding it can be “pretty good” and “doesn’t need to be tentative,” second-year head coach Jan Jensen said following the 85-78 win at Maryland. Iowa blew a 17-point lead in the final three minutes, but locked in to win in overtime.
Advertisement
Check winning close games off the list of useful experiences.
As Jensen put it after the win over Ohio State, they want to be “clear and clean with our offensive decisions.” And often, they are. The Hawkeyes consistently pass up good looks for great ones, averaging 21.3 assists per game to return to the top three in Division I after averaging 18.1 (10th) a season ago. They’re hitting 49.4% of their field goals (seventh), another jump back to prominence, and are 36.8% from 3-point range (17th).
Multiple players are solid 3-point shooting threats, led by sophomore point guard Chit Chat Wright shooting 48.2%. The Georgia Tech transfer is finding her leadership groove on both ends for a group that taps deeper into its defense under Jensen.
“When I see Chit Chat start to chat chat, that’s really growth,” Jensen said post-game on the broadcast after defeating Ohio State on Sunday.
Advertisement
But it’s their work in the paint that wears down opponents, as it did to the Buckeyes. The Hawkeyes outscored them 42-14 and won the boards 48-30. Jensen wasn’t happy with their turnovers, but it was the second-fewest that Ohio State’s press has forced all season.
Though the margins were much closer, Iowa also won those categories against Michigan State and Maryland. They won paint points in wins over then-No. 20 Nebraska and then-No. 7 Baylor. Not so in the losses to Iowa State, led by center and national leading scorer Audi Crooks, and UConn, featuring National Player of the Year contender Sarah Strong.
UCLA will challenge them there. Senior 6-foot-7 center Lauren Betts is a defensive cheat code patrolling the paint (2.3 blocks per game). It will be the most challenging matchup for Iowa senior Hannah Stuelke, a 6-2 forward playing back in her natural position, and sophomore Ava Heiden, a 6-4 center who did not play in last year’s 67-65 loss to the Bruins. Their high-low action gives opponents fits, and they’ll likely be without senior guard Taylor McCabe after she sustained a non-contact injury on Sunday.
Advertisement
Heiden emerged for Iowa in a Big Ten tournament run that ended in the quarterfinals for the No. 11 seed. She leads this Iowa roster, averaging 16.4 points and shooting 63.5% (fifth in DI), as the latest coaching product of Jensen, the “post whisperer.” It’s a legacy that includes Monika Czinano, Clark’s pick-and-roll partner on the 2023 Final Four team, and Megan Gustafson, the 2019 Naismith Player of the Year and 2025 WNBA champion with the Las Vegas Aces.
That component spans both eras of Iowa basketball. And it’s why they’re dangerous as they barrel toward March.
Performer of the week: Aliyah Chavez, Oklahoma
Every player has it. It’s that massive, show-out performance in a circled game on the schedule that introduces them to a national audience. For Chavez, a leading contender in the freshman of the year race, it came in crunch time of a 94-82 overtime loss to then-No. 2 ranked South Carolina on Thursday night.
After a quiet first half in which she went 1-of-7 with three points, Chavez settled in with six points in a 25-16 third quarter that set the Sooners apart. And when the Gamecocks’ defense forced overtime, she erupted by scoring 15 of the team’s 19 points, plus added an assist on one of the other two baskets. She went 5-of-5, including four 3-pointers, speeding around the South Carolina defense once she let the game find her.
Advertisement
Chavez scored 18, including four 3s, with four assists despite an inefficient outing to avoid an upset to Auburn on Sunday, 72-65.
Stat of the week: 1 undefeated left
Vanderbilt drew the unfortunate task of putting its undefeated record up against a South Carolina team coming off of a loss. And that never bodes well for opponents of the Gamecocks, who haven’t lost back-to-back games since March 2019.
The Commodores’ 103-74 loss leaves UConn as the lone remaining undefeated in women’s college hoops entering the five weeks of the season. The last team to go undefeated and win the national championship was South Carolina in 2024. Ten teams have done it in the NCAA era; UConn has six of them.
Advertisement
Game of the week: Tennessee (14-3) at UConn (21-0) Sunday, 12 p.m. ET on Fox
Following four straight losses dating back to 2020, when the rivalry series returned from its 12-year hiatus, Tennessee hit back with an upset win a year ago in Kim Caldwell’s first season. The Huskies won by double digits in all but one of those four previous meetings.
UConn is deeper than a year ago, rolling through opponents with ease. A win here would nearly assure an undefeated regular season as it’s UConn’s final non-conference opponent.
Tennessee is on a seven-game win streak after a blowout loss to Louisville at the Champions Classic in December. The Lady Vols took down SEC power Alabama and Kentucky in that span and will face Mississippi State on Thursday. Their game at Ole Miss on Monday was postponed due to the storm. A rescheduled date has yet to be announced.
Advertisement
Also: Princeton (17-1, 5-0) hosts Columbia (13-5, 4-1) on Friday (6 p.m. ET, ESPNU) in a crucial result for the Ivy League crown.
Yahoo Sports’ AP Top 25 ballot
1. UConn
2. Texas
3. UCLA
4. South Carolina
5. LSU
6. Michigan
7. Vanderbilt
8. Iowa
9. Louisville
10. Baylor
11. Oklahoma
12. Tennessee
13. TCU
14. Ohio State
15. Michigan State
16. Maryland
17. Kentucky
18. Princeton
19. Duke
20. West Virginia
21. Nebraska
22. Texas Tech
23. Illinois
24. Washington
25. Rhode Island
Official AP Top 25
1. UConn
2. UCLA
3. South Carolina
4. Texas
5. Vanderbilt
6. LSU
7. Louisville
8. Iowa
9. Michigan
10. Oklahoma
11. Ohio State
12. TCU
13. Michigan State
14. Baylor
15. Tennessee
16. Maryland
17. Ole Miss
18. Kentucky
19. Princeton
20. Duke
21. Texas Tech
22. West Virginia
23. Georgia
24. Alabama
25. Washington
Advertisement