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Tickets go on sale Friday for the 2024 MLS All-Star game, which will again feature MLS All-Stars against a team of Liga MX All-Stars from Mexico.

The game is set for July 24 at Lower.com Field in Columbus, Ohio, the league announced Monday. Apple TV will live stream the game via MLS Season Pass. Tickets can be purchased at MLSsoccer.com/AllStar beginning at 10 a.m. Friday.

It will be the third MLS All-Star Week to pit MLS against Liga MX as the soccer leagues continue their partnership, which also includes major events on the soccer calendar like Leagues Cup and Campeones Cup.

The intent is to showcase ‘the global and rising stars of our leagues, and the strength of our sport in North America,’ MLS Executive Vice President of Properties and Events Camilo Durana said in a statement. “Our previous encounters set a high bar for intensity and competition in all-star games.”

Liga MX president Mikel Arriola called the matchup a privilege and said his league will ‘bring together its best players to form a competitive team.’

‘We are very excited about the opportunity to reconnect and be close to the Mexican fanbase in the United States,’ he said in the statement.

Will Lionel Messi play in 2024 MLS All-Star game?

It’s important to note: Messi is expected to join Argentina for this summer’s Copa America 2024. The MLS All-Star game will be 10 days after the Copa America final on July 14 in Miami.

Inter Miami’s first match after Copa America and the MLS All-Star weekend is July 17 against Toronto FC.

TICKETS: See Messi and Inter Miami in person vs. Nashville SC

MLS vs. Liga MX All-Star Skills Challenge

The MLS and Liga MX All-Stars will also compete in the All-Star Skills Challenge, which will take place July 23, as 10 stars from each side will participate in several competitions.

MLS will also host a week of events in Columbus surrounding the game, including concerts, community service initiatives, player appearances and an additional showcase match featuring the best young players from the MLS academies playing in MLS NEXT.

MLS All-Stars vs. Liga MX history

The MLS All-Stars have won both previous All-Star Games against Liga MX, winning the inaugural 2021 edition in penalties and the 2022 match 2-1 with goals from Carlos Vela (LAFC) and Raúl Ruidíaz (Seattle Sounders FC).  

How will MLS All-Star players be selected?

The MLS All-Star roster will consist of 12 players selected by a fan vote, 12 players selected by MLS All-Star coach Wilfried Nancy, and two players selected by MLS Commissioner Don Garber. The Liga MX All-Star roster will consist of 26 players. More details about fan voting and the selection process will be announced at a later date.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The ‘Wiseman’ is headed to the Hall of Fame.

Longtime professional wrestling icon Paul Heyman will be the first inductee into the WWE Hall of Fame 2024 class, the Associated Press first reported Monday.

The honor is an achievement that’s been decades in the making since Heyman first got into the business as a teenage photographer in the 1970s.

In the 1980s, Heyman broke through in wrestling by becoming a manager in World Championship Wrestling, aligning himself with some of the profession’s biggest stars like Steve Austin, Arn Anderson and Rick Rude. But Heyman’s career didn’t really take off until he was fired from WCW, and in the 1990s, he launched Extreme Championship Wrestling, a violent and intense company that became a hit promotion and would be an inspiration for WWE’s ‘Attitude Era’ that emerged years later.

‘The innovator took ECW from public access to national pay-per-view by endorsing brutal bouts showcasing the rare combination of misfit warriors alongside cutting-edge athletes,’ WWE said.

After managing ECW through the turn of the century, Heyman joined WWE as a commentator but would manage the ECW ‘Invasion’ of the company. In 2006, WWE held one of its most iconic pay-per-view events in ECW One Night Stand, which helped relaunch Heyman’s promotion within WWE. However that same year, Heyman left the company amid disputes with the company’s leadership.

Heyman would come back to WWE as the manager of Brock Lesnar in 2012, and being the companion of other WWE stars that became ‘Paul Heyman Guys,’ like CM Punk, before only siding with Lesnar in 2014. For years, Lesnar and Heyman were at the top of the company. Lesnar had several WWE championship reigns and ended The Undertaker’s WrestleMania streaks in one of the biggest moments in company history.

Heyman continued his success as a manager in 2020 when he aligned himself with Roman Reigns, becoming his ‘special counsel.’ Together, Reigns would eventually become the Undisputed WWE Universal Champion ― a title he still holds today ― while forming ‘The Bloodline’ faction with family members the Usos and Sola Sikoa. In the role, Heyman became known as the ‘Wiseman’ as the group has held its spot at the top of WWE. Heyman will be by Reigns’ side at WrestleMania 40 against Cody Rhodes, but the soon-to-be Hall of Famer is far from done.

“I consistently feel like I’m just getting started, and I’m just figuring this out,” Heyman told the Associated Press. “To me, what is an incomplete body of work, because there’s still things I want to accomplish, I never felt comfortable accepting that is a reflection upon an entire career.”

The 2024 WWE Hall of Fame ceremony will be April 5 at at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia after ‘Smackdown.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Carl begins today’s show with a walk through General Electric (GE) which was in the news this week. See what Carl thinks of the charts!

Carl covers the market in general and pays particular attention to Gold as it launches skyward. Can this run continue? What does this mean for Gold Miners?

Erin gives us a complete overview of the sectors, identifying strength and where the weakness lies. She also discusses why she likes these to sectors.

01:00 Discussion regarding General Electric (GE)

05:35 Weekly Charts of the Magnificent 7

09:30 Market Overview

12:58 Gold Discussion

23:26 Sector and Industry Group Review

29:30 Symbol Requests

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In this edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave shows how the Magnificent 7 has become much less of a comparable group of stocks, with TSLA, AAPL, and GOOGL all breaking down in recent weeks. He also tracks Bitcoin’s retest of all-time highs and why high yield bonds (HYG) may be the most important chart to watch in March.

This video originally premiered on March 4, 2024. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV!

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

The European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm, on Monday hit Apple with a 1.8 billion euros ($1.95 billion) antitrust fine for abusing its dominant position on the market for the distribution of music streaming apps.

The commission said it found that Apple had applied restrictions on app developers that prevented them from informing iOS users about alternative and cheaper music subscription services available outside of the app.

Apple also banned developers of music streaming apps from providing any instructions about how users could subscribe to these cheaper offers, the commission alleged.

This is Apple’s first antitrust fine from Brussels and is among one of the biggest dished out to a technology company by the E.U.

The European Commission opened an investigation into Apple after a complaint from Spotify in 2019. The probe was narrowed down to focus on contractual restrictions that Apple imposed on app developers which prevent them from informing iPhone and iPad users of alternative music subscription services at lower prices outside of the App Store.

Apple’s conduct lasted almost 10 years, according to the commission, and “may have led many iOS users to pay significantly higher prices for music streaming subscriptions because of the high commission fee imposed by Apple on developers and passed on to consumers in the form of higher subscription prices for the same service on the Apple App Store.”

The fine will ramp up tensions between Big Tech and Brussels at a time when the E.U. is increasing scrutiny of these firms.

Last year, the commission designated Apple among other tech firms such as Microsoft and Meta as “gatekeepers” under a landmark regulation called the Digital Markets Act, which broadly came into effect last year.

The term gatekeepers refers to massive internet platforms which the E.U. believes are restricting access to core platform services, such as online search, advertising, and messaging and communications.

The Digital Markets Act aims to clamp down on anti-competitive practices from tech players, and force them to open out some of their services to other competitors. Smaller internet firms and other businesses have complained about being hurt by these companies’ business practices.

These laws have already had an impact on Apple. The Cupertino, California-based giant announced plans this year to open up its iPhone and iPad to alternative app stores other than its own. Developers have long-complained about the 30% fee Apple charges on in-app purchases.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

JetBlue Airways and Spirit Airlines on Monday said they were terminating their merger agreement weeks after losing a federal antitrust lawsuit that challenged the deal.

A federal judge blocked the attempted merger in January after the Justice Department sued to bar the deal last year alleging the acquisition would stifle competition in the airline industry and eliminate Spirit as a discount alternative for price-conscious travelers.

JetBlue and Spirit appealed the judge’s decision a couple of days later, but JetBlue noted the appeal was required under the terms of the merger agreement.

Spirit shares tumbled 17% in premarket trading, while shares of JetBlue were up roughly 4%.

“It was a bold and courageous plan intended to shake up the industry status quo, and we were right to compete with Frontier and go for an opportunity that would have supercharged our growth and provided more opportunities for crewmembers,” JetBlue CEO Joanna Geraghty said in a note to staff Monday.

“However, with the ruling from the federal court and the Department of Justice’s continued opposition, the probability of getting the green light to move forward with the merger anytime soon is extremely low.”

JetBlue’s prospective purchase of Spirit would have been a buoy for the struggling discounter airline, which is facing the grounding of dozens of its Airbus planes for inspections stemming from a Pratt & Whitney engine defect. Spirit expects compensation from the engine maker as a result of the flaw.

With the deal off the table, Spirit must confront its financial problems alone, something its leaders say it is equipped to do.

The company said it was working to refinance its debt, and last month said it was on a path back to profitability thanks to better-than-expected demand. It projected revenue for the first quarter above analysts’ expectations.

“Throughout the transaction process, given the regulatory uncertainty, we have always considered the possibility of continuing to operate as a standalone business and have been evaluating and implementing several initiatives that will enable us to bolster profitability and elevate the Guest experience,” Spirit CEO Ted Christie said in a release.

He said Spirit shareholders received $425 million in prepayments from JetBlue during the agreement, and that JetBlue will pay Spirit $69 million related to the agreement’s termination.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The price of bitcoin soared past $65,000 Monday, putting it within striking distance of its all-time high reached in November 2021.

The cryptocurrency has gained 48% in 2024 and is approaching the intra-day all-time high of more than $68,000

The latest rally is being fueled by hopes that the launch of bitcoin exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, will expand the pool of bitcoin buyers.

These ETFs were approved in January by the Securities and Exchange Commission as a means of making it easier for investors to gain exposure to the price movements of bitcoin as part of a diversified portfolio without having to go through the sometimes onerous process of owning the digital coins themselves.

The ETFs have collectively already seen billions of dollars of investments.

The cryptocurrency world is also banking on a price rally coming after a technical event known as ‘halving’ occurs in April. This causes the rate of supply of new bitcoin to decline. Thus, if demand remains unchanged or even grows, the price goes up.

Bitcoin remains highly controversial, and many mainstream investment experts and market regulators urge caution about investing in it. For instance, SEC Chair Gary Gensler said the agency’s ETF approvals were not an endorsement of bitcoin, calling it a “speculative, volatile asset.”

And in a blog post in January, executives at financial giant Vanguard echoed that view, stating cryptocurrencies like bitcoin are ‘more of a speculation than an investment’ which is why the company does not offer crypto products.

‘With equities, you own a share of a company that produces goods or services, and many also pay dividends,’ Vanguard said. ‘With bonds, you get a stream of interest payments. Commodities are real assets that meet consumption needs, have inflation-hedging properties, and can play a role in certain portfolios.’

‘While crypto has been classified as a commodity, it’s an immature asset class that has little history, no inherent economic value, no cash flow, and can create havoc within a portfolio.’

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Boeing is in talks to buy back Spirit Aerosystems, which makes fuselages for Boeing’s 737 Max jets, according to a person familiar with the matter, as both companies scramble to stamp out manufacturing flaws on the top-selling plane.

Shares of Spirit were up 13% as of early afternoon on Friday, while shares of Boeing were down about 1%. Spirit Aerosystems had a market capitalization of $3.3 billion as of Thursday’s close.

“We do not comment on market speculation,” a spokesperson for Spirit Aerosystems told CNBC. Boeing also declined to comment.

Boeing in 2005 spun off operations in Kansas and Oklahoma that became the present-day Spirit Aerosystems. About 70% of Spirit’s revenue last year came from Boeing, and about a quarter comes from making parts for Boeing’s main rival, Airbus.

The repurchase talks were first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

It comes less than two months after a section of a Boeing 737 Max 9 plane blew out during an Alaska Airlines flight. The Federal Aviation Administration temporarily grounded all of the planes in January, leading to investigations into the accident and Boeing’s production lines.

It was the latest and most serious in a host of flaws on the Boeing 737 Max, Boeing’s best-selling jet.

The bolts on the door plug of the Max involved in the January accident appeared not to have been attached when it left Boeing’s Renton, Washington, factory, according to a preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board.

Boeing has disclosed several production problems and quality flaws on the fuselages that Spirit makes, including incorrectly drilled holes and incorrect spacing on some fuselage components, problems that slowed deliveries of new jets to airlines.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

NORMAN, Oklahoma — The top-ranked Oklahoma softball team suffered its first loss in a year, falling 7-5 to Louisiana on Sunday afternoon at Love’s Field in eight innings.

With the loss, Oklahoma’s NCAA-record winning streak ended at 71 games.

The Ragin’ Cajuns scored three runs on two singles in the top of the eighth inning. Sooners junior infielder Cydney Sanders homered to left center field in the bottom half of the inning, but it wasn’t enough. 

Following a two-out RBI single by Tiare Jennings which scored Avery Hodge in the seventh inning, Riley Ludlam singled to right field, scoring Maya Bland after an error by the Ragin’ Cajuns’ catcher Victoria Valdez, tying the game and marking the first extra innings contest at Love’s Field. 

Down a run in the top of the seventh, the Sooners uncharacteristically struggled fielding, allowing the Ragin’ Cajuns to add a hit and a run to their lead. Kasadi Pickering couldn’t rope in a double despite a diving attempt in left field.

Then, Oklahoma committed two errors. One by Jennings at shortstop that led to Maddie Hayden reaching base and one by Kinzie Hansen who dropped the ball during a tag at home, which led to a run scored by Mihyia Davis. The Sooners committed three errors, marking the first time they have had three or more errors in a game since June 2021.

The Sooners (18-1) finished the OU Tournament with one win over the Ragin’ Cajuns (10-12), two against Liberty and a dramatic walk-off to beat Miami (Ohio), which opened its new stadium with a bang on Friday.

Jennings notched three hits, including a double and an RBI in the loss. 

Here are three brief takeaways from the Sooners’ loss:

Kelly Maxwell’s day ends after 3⅔ innings pitched

Kelly Maxwell never found her groove on Sunday.

The graduate transfer, who entered the contest with a 1.59 ERA, allowed a solo home run by Jourdyn Campbell in the top of the second inning, which opened up the scoring. Maxwell settled in a bit in the third inning attacking the strike zone more aggressively, before allowing two more runs and being replaced by graduate transfer Karlie Keeney in the top of the fourth.

Maxwell allowed three earned runs and struck out four batters in 3⅔ innings of work. Maxwell is up to 31 strikeouts in five starts to start 2024.

The Oklahoma State transfer earned a win for the Sooners on Friday, striking out seven and allowing just two hits in a 8-0 win over Liberty.

Hansen stays hot, wakes up bats

Two days after Kinzie Hansen opened Love’s Field with a bang — smashing a walk-off home run — Oklahoma relied on her heroics again on Sunday.

The Sooners’ offense started slow with five hits and zero runs through the first three innings  against Louisiana, until Hansen crushed a two-run shot to right center field, scoring Ella Parker.

Hansen finished 2-for-3 from the plate with two RBI.

Lengthy review erases Sooners run

Even though the call was confirmed following a lengthy official review, Patty Gasso wasn’t done yet.

The seven-time national champion coach wanted an explanation on why Ella Parker was called out after she appeared to reach base before Louisiana’s infielder landed on first. The play would’ve scored Jayda Coleman and tied the game at three in the bottom of the fifth inning. 

The ruling came after Paker never appeared to touch first base.

After chants of “safe” roared through the park and Gasso was done with her discussions, the Sooners went to the sixth without a run.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

With her favorite player looking on and another great women’s scorer in attendance, Caitlin Clark became the leading scorer in NCAA Division I basketball Sunday over Ohio State. 

The record was expected – Clark started the game just 18 points from passing Pete Maravich – but caused a celebration all the same. When Clark hit two free throws with .3 seconds to play in the first half, Iowa fans went crazy, in the arena and online. Included in the crowd was former WNBA MVP Maya Moore, Clark’s childhood idol, and Lynette Woodard, previously the best scorer in the history of women’s major-college basketball. 

It was a fitting moment for the homegrown superstar who said last week that this would be her last college season and she will enter the 2024 WNBA Draft. 

Clark finished with 35 points (plus nine assists, six rebounds and three steals) in Iowa’s 93-83 win.

Maravich scored 3,667 points at LSU from 1967-70, before freshmen were eligible to play and the 3-point line existed. His record has stood for more than five decades (though Antoine Davis came extremely close to passing it when he scored 3,664 points for Detroit Mercy from 2018-2023). While some have argued we shouldn’t compare Clark and Maravich because they played in such different eras, there’s no question it’s a milestone worth acknowledging. 

And she’s not done yet. Clark will continue to add to her career points total (3,685 and counting) as Iowa begins the postseason. The Hawkeyes have a bye into the Big Ten quarterfinals as the No. 2 seed, and will play their first game of the conference tourney Friday. After their run through the conference tournament, Iowa is set to host the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament as a top-4 seed. 

It is entirely possible that Clark, one of the most prolific scorers in the history of basketball, will in the end set a record that might never be broken. 

— Lindsay Schnell

Caitlin Clark praises Iowa fans for changing women’s basketball

Though Clark is not one to dwell on her accomplishments or the frenzy that’s surrounded her this season, she’s not unaware of it.

Clark used her time at senior day to thank the Iowa fans. She recalled playing games in empty arenas her freshman year, when the COVID-19 pandemic was still raging. Crowds grew her sophomore season, she said, noting that curtains used to block empty seats often had to be removed.

Now, Iowa women’s basketball is the hottest ticket in the country.

“It isn’t what it is without all of you,” Clark told the crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

“This is special,” she added. “I don’t know if you realize what you’re doing for women’s basketball, women’s sports in general, but you’re changing it.”

One sign of that: Clark’s parents and brothers wore T-shirts made by Nike featuring a drawing of her shooting and the words, “This was never a long shot.” That’s the tagline Nike used for Clark passing Maravich, which isn’t to be confused with the “You break it, you own it” tagline when she passed Plum. – Nancy Armour

FINAL: Iowa 93, Ohio State 83

And that’s all she wrote, folks. 

Led by Clark, Iowa avenged one of its toughest losses of the season, beating Ohio State 93-83 on senior day in Iowa City. Clark led all scorers with 35 points, adding nine assists, six rebounds and three steals to her stat line.

Clark wasn’t the only star Sunday, though: Hannah Stuelke scored 23 and grabbed nine rebounds. Gabby Marshall had 12, and Kate Martin chipped in 11. 

Meanwhile, Ohio State had five players in double figures, led by Jacy Sheldon’s 24 points. 

With the win, Iowa locks up the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten conference tournament, which starts this week. Ohio State is the 1 seed, which means we could get another Iowa-Ohio State game next Sunday, March 10. 

It wasn’t all good news for Iowa though: After hurting her right knee, Molly Davis returned to the sideline in a wheelchair, with her leg heavily wrapped. Her status going forward is unknown. 

— Lindsay Schnell

Iowa vs. Ohio State highlights: Caitlin Clark passes Pete Maravich

LeBron congratulates Caitlin Clark

From one all-time leading scorer to another.

LeBron James, who went over 40,000 points in the NBA on Saturday night, congratulated Clark on breaking Maravich’s 54-year-old record.

“CONGRATS @CaitlinClark22 on becoming the All-Time leading scorer!!” James wrote on X, adding 13 bucket emojis, as well as the salute and crown emojis. 

End of 3Q: Iowa 75, Ohio State 64

Every time Ohio State inches closer, Iowa has an answer. 

Of course, it helps when the best player in the country is helping you find those answers. 

Through three quarters, Clark has 29 points, but she’s doing a lot more than scoring: she also has eight assists, four rebounds and three steals. 

Ohio State cut the lead to five midway through the third but Iowa responded immediately, and after Ohio State picked up another technical — this one by Harris after a physical battle for a rebound — the Hawkeyes went to the line and hit three more free throws. Sheldon ended the quarter by hitting a 3 for the Buckeyes to pull them within 11, but the 15-3 run Iowa reeled off earlier will make it hard for Ohio State to climb back into this game. 

— Lindsay Schnell

Lynette Woodard praises Caitlin Clark

Clark did what the NCAA would not. She brought recognition to Lynette Woodard and her scoring record.

Woodard scored 3,649 points at Kansas. But women’s basketball wasn’t an NCAA sport at the time, governed instead by the AIAW. Though the NCAA now recognizes coaches’ wins in the AIAW, it still doesn’t recognize players’ points. That’s why Kelsey Plum, not Woodard, was the leading scorer in NCAA women’s college basketball until Clark passed her.

“Records are made to be broken. But they’re also meant to be honored. Because of (Clark), my record is being honored,” said Woodard, who was at the game Sunday.

Woodard said she’s been thrilled to watch Clark’s assault on the record books. She’s even more thrilled at the reaction there’s been. 

“This is a great time for women’s basketball, Caitlin is leading the way,” Woodard said.

“It’s just beautiful to watch,” Woodard added. “What they’ve done here at the University of Iowa has transcended the game. Every walk of life, everybody knows Caitlin Clark, the University of Iowa and what she’s done.” 

Nancy Armour

Nike’s newest Caitlin Clark commercial

Nike was ready for Clark to become the NCAA’s leading scorer.

The shoe giant, which currently has Clark on its roster of athletes, clearly had fun with a new commercial that lists Clark’s accomplishments, and calls her the ‘current even-more-outstanding player.’ Watch below:

Hours before tipoff, fans line up to see Caitlin Clark

With Iowa Hawkeyes superstar Caitlin Clark on the verge of making college basketball history, some fans couldn’t bear to wait for the noon (local) tip-off.

Clark entered Sunday 18 points away from breaking ‘Pistol Pete’ Maravich’s Division I college basketball all-time scoring record. As the Iowa women’s basketball star prepared to break the record during Iowa’s senior day, hundreds of fans showed up to Carver-Hawkeye Arena three hours before the Hawkeyes’ scheduled tip-off.

One photo taken around 9 a.m. CT showed fans lining up outside the arena. A video taken after doors opened at 9 a.m. featured fans streaming into the stadium’s lower bowl well ahead of the game.

Read (and see) more here.

Travis Scott in town to watch Caitlin Clark

Fellow athletes aren’t the only stars impressed by Clark. Rapper Travis Scott was at Sunday’s game to watch Clark break Maravich’s all-time scoring record.

“Caitlin is my friend,” Scott told ESPN’s Holly Rowe. “Here for her and Gabbie Marshall who is amazing.”

On X, Scott said he “might need that #22 jersey tonight!!!!!” Clark, of course, wears No. 22. 

Scott was far from the only celebrity celebrating Clark and congratulating her on the record.

Nancy Armour

Caitlin Clark to get custom Kristin Juszczyk vest to commemorate record

Caitlin Clark will be given a custom vest by Kristin Juszczyk to celebrate her senior day. The vest commemorates her breaking Kelsey Plum’s NCAA women’s scoring record along with her school records, per Yahoo Sports. The vest features elements from Clark’s Hawkeyes jerseys and ‘NCAA women’s scoring leader” and “all-time Iowa leader in: points, assists, 3PM, FGM.”

The designer skyrocketed to fame this past NFL season because she makes her own clothes to cheer on her husband, San Francisco 49ers’ fullback Kristin Juszczyk, and also made jersey jackets for Simone Biles and Taylor Swift, who is dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. The pop superstar’s jacket went viral and helped boost Juszczyk to 1 million Instagram followers and a licensing deal with the NFL.

Read more here.

— Victoria Hernandez

WNBA can’t wait for Caitlin Clark to join the party

The WNBA and the Indiana Fever are just a tad excited that Clark is taking her show to the league soon.

Both the W and the Fever congratulated Clark on social media after she broke Maravich’s record.

“congratulations to Caitlin Clark on passing Pete Maravich’s all-time NCAA scoring record” the Fever said on X, adding a fire emoji.

The WNBA congratulated her and said, “3,668 points … and counting.”

Nancy Armour

See Caitlin Clark’s free throw that broke the record

Watch the shot here.

Halftime: Iowa 48, Ohio State 39

Talk about a frenzied end to the first half. 

Just two points from the record, Clark launched a 3 with 14 seconds left — way too much time —  allowing Ohio State to score again before the period ended, bringing Ohio State within five, 44-29. 

But then Iowa got out in transition (again), and Stuelke got fouled on a shot attempt. In the aftermath of that foul call, Ohio State’s McMahon was hit with a technical for pushing Clark, which led to two free throws from Clark. And that’s how she broke the record.  So suddenly, it’s a four-point Iowa possession, and the Hawkeyes have a nine-point halftime lead.

Naturally, Clark leads all scorers with 18 points. 

The difference right now is in the paint, where Iowa has doubled up the Buckeyes, outscoring them 20-10 (Stuelke has 10 of those 20 paint points, plus four points from the charity stripe). Iowa has also taken 12 free throws to Ohio State’s four. Both of these things are helping cover the fact that Iowa has 10 turnovers. 

Sheldon leads Ohio State with 12 points, but McMahon still only has four. 

Also, Iowa announced that Davis is out for the rest of the game with a knee injury. That’s a tough loss for Iowa. Davis doesn’t score much, but she does a lot that doesn’t show up in the box score. 

— Lindsay Schnell

How Caitlin Clark passed Pete Maravich with her 3,668th point

Well that was anticlimactic.

Instead of hitting a logo 3 to break Maravich’s all-time scoring record, as she did to pass Kelsey Plum, Clark got it with a free throw with less than a second left in the first half.

Ohio State’s Cotie McMahon had bumped Clark slightly, but Clark did her best Cristiano Ronaldo imitation to sell it and McMahon was hit with a technical. Clark made the first free throw to tie Maravich, then the second to get the record for herself.

When the halftime buzzer sounded, Clark’s teammates jumped up and down and the crowd went wild.

“Not really,” Clark told Fox’s Allison Williams at halftime. “But then when they announced and everybody screamed, that’s when I knew. Pretty cool.”

Nancy Armour

6:39, 2Q: Iowa’s Molly Davis goes down

After making a great defensive play and poking the ball loose, Molly Davis is down. 

Davis took an awkward fall when she stepped in front of an Ohio State pass, and instantly grabbed for her right knee. On the replay, it looked like she badly rolled her right ankle. She is clearly in a lot of pain, and Iowa staffers had to carry her off the floor. 

As the crowd chanted her name, Davis gave the thumbs up as she went back into the tunnel and to the training room. Iowa had a 36-26 lead when Davis went down.  

Lindsay Schnell

End of 1Q: Iowa 28, Ohio State 19

Sheesh, Iowa plays well at home. 

A 17-3 run midway through the first quarter helped the Hawkeyes build as much as a 15-point lead. Part of that run came from Iowa slicing and dicing Ohio State’s vaunted press. Iowa already has a 7-2 edge in fast break points, and Clark already has five assists (and just one turnover). 

Meanwhile, Clark is just 12 points away from passing Maravich after two first-quarter 3s. 

Ohio State seems to be settling a little. Jacy Sheldon already has nine points, but if the Buckeyes are going to pull off another win over Iowa, Cotie McMahon, who currently has just two points, has to get going offensively.  

Lindsay Schnell

Caitlin Clark shines with passing, too

Clark’s scoring gets the attention, but my word, her court vision and passing is just as lethal. She has just three points through the first seven-plus minutes of the game but five assists, including a slick pass through traffic to Hannah Stuelke. Stuelke drew a foul on the driving layup and made the free throw to convert the three-point play to put Iowa up 22-10.  

Nancy Armour

4:39, 1Q: Iowa 13, Ohio State 7

Fox Sports analyst Sara Kustok said it best: “This building might explode.” 

It is LOUD in Carver-Hawkeye Arena, and the Buckeyes seem rattled by it. Clark only has three points so far, connecting on just 1-of-4 attempts, but Iowa, a team not known for defense, has already forced Ohio State into three turnovers.

And while Clark might not be shooting great early, her team came to play and has hit on 4-of-6 attempts. All together, Iowa is shooting 50% from the field. That’s a good way to get revenge on one of the toughest losses of the season. 

Lindsay Schnell

How to watch Iowa vs. Ohio State

No. 2 Ohio State at No. 6 Iowa can be seen nationally on Fox and can be streamed using the Fox Sports App. The game can also be found on Fubo. For Fox, Gus Johnson will be on the play-by-play with analyst Sarah Kustok. Allison Williams will handle sideline duties.

Maya Moore surprises Caitlin Clark for senior day

Caitlin Clark got the ultimate surprise on senior day — a visit from her favorite player.

Anyone who’s talked to Clark knows that as a young girl, she pretty much worshipped Maya Moore, the former WNBA MVP who lead the Minnesota Lynx to four WNBA titles during her eight-year career. Clark’s dad, Brent, would make the 3.5-hour drive from their home in Des Moines to Minneapolis to watch Moore, and after a game once, Caitlin ran on the floor to hug Moore. Caitlin said of meeting her idol, “Ten seconds can go a long way in someone’s life.”

Sunday morning, she got a lot more than 10 seconds though.

Standing outside the Iowa locker room after shoot around, Clark was being interviewed when Moore walked on the scene. Clark shrieked in excitement, and hugged her hero again.

“I feel like I’m fangirl-ing,” said Clark, who was clearly overcome with emotion. It was a pure, joyful moment.

Lindsay Schnell

Stop comparing Caitlin Clark and Pete Maravich

If women’s basketball fans and advocates are honest about why the Caitlin Clark phenomenon is breaking through in a way that superstars in previous eras of their sport have not, they need to acknowledge an indelicate but crucial factor in her popularity.

While grievance is a powerful tool in sports and has long been necessary to advance equality and create opportunity for women, Clark has never presented herself as the face of a larger cause. Part of her appeal to the fans who have either ignored or mocked women’s basketball in the past — mostly men, of course — is that they aren’t being shamed to pay attention. Her charisma and style stand on their own. 

And as this weekend approaches, where the narrative around Clark will now turn to the 3,667-point mark that has forever been associated with Pete Maravich, that’s exactly where her achievements should remain. 

On their own. 

Just like Pistol Pete’s. 

Read Dan Wolken’s column here.

What Caitlin Clark has done is bigger than any number

The record, and the numbers behind it, really don’t matter.

How many points Caitlin Clark has when she finishes this season, how many more that is than Pete Maravich had — they’ll all eventually become footnotes. Future answers to trivia questions.

What does matter is how Clark’s assault on the record books captivated the country, reflecting a seismic shift in how women’s sports, and the athletes who play them, are viewed.

Read Nancy Armour’s column here.

Can anyone challenge Caitlin Clark’s NCAA scoring record? 

Kelsey Plum’s record stood for seven years. Iowa coach Lisa Bluder thinks Clark’s could stand even longer. 

“This record is going to stand for a long time and I’m just glad she’s wearing black and gold,” Bluder said. 

Bluder also said she loved that Clark set the record with a logo 3, the shot that’s become her signature.

“You do it, you do it well, girl,” Bluder said.  – Nancy Armour 

Caitlin Clark stats 

Clark enters Sunday’s game with 3,650 career points, just 18 from passing Pete Maravich on the all-time scoring list. She is averaging 32.1 points per game this season with one regular-season game remaining, plus Big Ten and NCAA tournament games. 

What is Caitlin Clark’s highest-scoring game?   

Clark’s highest-scoring game was also her record-breaking performance on Feb. 15 against Michigan in the 2023-24 season, when she scored 49 points. Clark shot 16-for-31 that game, including 9-for-18 from 3. She also grabbed five rebounds and handed out 13 assists in the 106-89 win.  

What type of Caitlin Clark fan are you? Take the quiz. 

Do you love Caitlin Clark or do you LOVE Caitlin Clark?  

Love her, hate her, like her or think she’s overrated, one thing is for sure: The senior guard from Iowa has serious game.  

Not sure exactly where you stand? We can help you out. This USA TODAY Sports quiz will reveal the answer to a crucial question as we prep for March Madness: What kind of Caitlin Clark fan are you? – Lindsay Schnell 

Sheryl Swoopes speaks with Caitlin Clark after viral comments 

After making a controversial dig at Caitlin Clark as she neared the women’s all-time NCAA scoring record, Sheryl Swoopes said she spoke to the Iowa star about her comments − thanks to LSU’s Angel Reese. 

The three-time WNBA Most Valuable Player was on the broadcast for Sunday’s game between Baylor and Texas Tech, where she said Reese helped facilitate a conversation between her and Clark. 

‘A couple of weeks ago, I reached out to Angel and had a really good conversation with Angel over the phone and sent a message to Caitlin. She responded. She and I went back and forth,” Swoopes said. ‘I won’t share what she said, I’ll leave that to her if she wants to share. But I will say, what I said to her was, ‘I made a mistake in saying it was your fifth year when it is your fourth.’ “  – Jordan Mendoza 

How tall is Caitlin Clark?   

Clark is 6-foot. Big guards have become more common in women’s basketball the last decade or so, and Clark’s size absolutely helps her because she’s able to see over defenders on the break and helps her get vertical separation when she goes up for a shot.   

Also of note: Clark, who’s pretty thin, worked hard last summer to put on eight pounds of muscle and that has made a huge difference in her game, particularly when she drives to the rim.  

Clark-mania: A look at how much Caitlin Clark fans travel and spend to watch Iowa star  

By now you’ve probably heard that Iowa All-American Caitlin Clark, the reigning national player of the year, has a tendency to sell out any arena she plays in. But for a closer look at #Clarkonomics — as ESPN analyst Debbie Antonelli has termed it — USA TODAY reporter Jim Sergent worked up a graphic look at just how much Iowa fans will spend and how far they’ll travel to see Clark in person. The numbers are telling, to say the least.  

WNBA legend Sue Bird: Caitlin Clark will have ‘success early’ in league 

Four-time WNBA champion Sue Bird believes Caitlin Clark’s game will translate well into the WNBA. 

‘I do think she has a chance at having a lot of success early,’ Bird said during an appearance on ’The Sports Media Podcast’ with Richard Deitsch, which airs in full on Thursday. 

Bird cites the Iowa star’s range as the key weapon to her success. (Clark did break the women’s all-time NCAA scoring record last week on a 35-foot logo shot, after all.) ‘I think a lot of it comes down to her long-distance shooting. That is her separator. You’re not really used to guarding people out there,’ Bird explained.  – Cydney Henderson 

Caitlin Clark game-by-game points this season  

Here’s a breakdown of Clark’s scoring this season for the Hawkeyes:  

vs. Ohio State, 3/3/24: 35 points
at Minnesota, 2/28/24: 33 points
vs. Illinois, 2/25/24: 24 points
at Indiana, 2/22/24: 24 points 
vs. Michigan, 2/15/24: 49 points  (season-high, school record for single game)  
vs. Nebraska, 2/11/24: 31 points 
vs. Penn State, 2/8/24: 27 points  
at Maryland, 2/3/24: 38 points  
at Northwestern, 1/31/24: 35 points  
vs. Nebraska, 1/27/2024: 38 points  
at Ohio State, 1/21/2024: 45 points 
vs. Wisconsin, 1/16/2024: 32 points  
vs. Indiana, 1/13/2024: 30 points  
at Purdue, 1/10/2024: 26 points  
at Rutgers, 1/5/2024: 29 points  
vs. Michigan State, 1/2/2024: 40 points  
vs. Minnesota, 12/30/2023: 35 points  
vs. Loyola Chicago, 12/21/2023: 35 points  
vs. Cleveland State, 12/16/2023: 38 points  
at Wisconsin, 12/10/2023: 28 points  
vs. Iowa State, 12/6/2023: 35 points  
vs. Bowling Green, 12/2/2023: 24 points  
vs. Kansas State, 11/26/2023: 32 points  
vs. Florida Gulf Coast, 11/25/2023: 21 points  
vs. Purdue Fort Wayne, 11/24/2023: 29 points  
vs. Drake, 11/19/2023: 35 points  
vs. Kansas State, 11/16/2023: 24 points  
at UNI, 11/12/2023: 24 points  
vs. Virginia Tech, 11/9/2023: 44 points  
vs. FDU, 11/6/2023: 28 points  

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