Scott Van Pelt: A big night for women's college hoops - ESPN
There were years doing this show that when it came to the women's NCAA basketball tournament, it was difficult to generate a ton of excitement while discussing it, simply because it was a noncompetitive event. We'd ask Rebecca Lobo before it began: Can anyone beat UConn? Then the answer was a resounding no.
In 2016, they won their fourth consecutive title, and the average margin of the victory in the six games was 39.5 points. That made it 24 consecutive tournament wins by double digits. There was simply nobody in the same solar system.
These past couple of years, the sport saw a new galaxy of stars emerge, all of which led to a night like this. A Monday in April, and not the Final Four — but to get to the Final Four — that had the sports world buzzing.
In our show meeting, I kept making the same point repeatedly — let's not forget there is a South Carolina team out there who hasn't lost a game, who has lost only once in the last two seasons, who has already advanced. It will face an NC State team, who along with the men, has Raleigh dreaming of titles, plural. It just beat the 2-seed Stanford and the 1-seed Texas by double digits to make the Final Four.
But this day, most of the bandwidth was being eaten up by a title game rematch. Is it a couple rounds earlier than it ought to be? Probably. But the sport got the game it wanted. Iowa and Caitlin Clark are blindingly popular — she was a one-woman, sold-out show and ratings spike this season. Like Clark, LSU — who are the reigning champs, thank you very much — have the kind of popularity that in today's world demands in equal measure haters who root very loudly for them to fail spectacularly.
Someone's demise was guaranteed by this game, as was someone slapping their name


