Social media reacts to the Iowa Hawkeyes’ NCAA Tournament loss versus Creighton

Iowa fell in heartbreaking fashion to No. 10 seed Creighton, 64-62, on Sunday. Here were some of the best social media reactions.

A season highlighted by the Hawkeyes capturing a share of the Big Ten regular season championship and winning the Big Ten Tournament came to a close as No. 10 seed Creighton upset second-seeded Iowa inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Sunday afternoon, 64-62.

It looked like Iowa (24-8) was set to outlast Creighton (22-9) and advance into the Sweet 16 for a third consecutive season after Hawkeye junior guard Gabbie Marshall connected on back-to-back 3-pointers to put Iowa in front 56-54 with 6:53 remaining. Instead, Creighton weathered the Hawkeyes crowd after it had been brought to fever pitch.

Iowa transfer and now sophomore Creighton guard Lauren Jensen hit the game-winning 3-pointer with 15 seconds left to play as the Bluejays pulled off the 2022 NCAA Tournament’s biggest stunner to date.

Iowa trailed by as many as 12 points in the first half, but the Hawkeyes battled their way back all afternoon long.

“I’m just really proud of this team. I mean, and the exciting thing is we return everybody from our starting lineup, and that’s exciting. We have three great recruits coming in. But I couldn’t be more proud of this group. I love them. I can’t believe I don’t get to go to practice tomorrow. That’s the hardest thing for me right now is that I don’t get to go to practice tomorrow,” Iowa head women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder said.

Bluder said Iowa got what it was looking for on its final possession with the Hawkeyes trailing 64-62 and 3.6 seconds remaining to operate with.

“We did. We wanted to get it to either Monika or Caitlin. Those were our two people we were trying to get the ball to,” Bluder said.

A memorable season comes to a close, but one of the best parts of Iowa’s season was the type of fan support this team received. Here’s a look at some of the social media reactions to Iowa’s season-ending loss to Creighton.

March Sadness: Iowa women’s NCAA Tournament run ends versus No. 10 seed Creighton

A fantastic season came to a close as No. 10 seed Creighton shocked second-seeded Iowa, 64-62, inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

It wasn’t supposed to end this way. Not with that type of crowd inside of Carver-Hawkeye Arena and not with this talented Iowa team. Tenth-seeded Creighton (22-9) made sure that it did, though.

In front of a raucous Hawkeye crowd, Creighton never blinked. It only added to the sting that the game-winning, 3-point shot was delivered by Iowa transfer and now Creighton sophomore guard Lauren Jensen with 15 seconds remaining. Playing against her former team, Jensen netted 8-of-15 field goal attempts and finished with a team-high 19 points to lead the Bluejays.

“Honestly, I was just super excited. I honestly didn’t know if it was going to go in. It kind of rattled off the back rim there. It wasn’t super clean, but I’m just glad it fell,” Jensen said.

Jensen leaned on her familiarity with Iowa to overcome what was a third-consecutive sell out crowd for the Hawkeyes.

“Obviously I’m pretty familiar with the arena because I played here all of last year, but I felt like that definitely helped. But on the flip side, there’s also some nerves with that because I’m wearing a different color this year, but I feel like it did help,” Jensen said.

Iowa head women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder tipped the cap to her former player’s performance and thanked Hawkeye fans for the incredible environment they created.

“Obviously, just want to congratulate Creighton. A very well-played game, executed really well, defended really well. That’s a hard matchup for us. Five guards is a hard matchup. We knew that. But they did a great job, and Lauren Jensen was here last year, obviously that’s an incredible storyline. She goes over there and she comes back and beats us on our home court, and I want to congratulate her because she’s a great kid. She is a really, really good kid. I’m happy for her. I wish it wasn’t in this situation, but I am happy for her that she’s found a really good home and is really having a lot of success.

“Our crowd today was amazing again. I think we broke the NCAA record for first and second rounds of attendance, and I apologize to our fans that they couldn’t celebrate a victory with us today. They have been amazing all year, but boy, these last three games they’ve been incredible. So I want to thank them,” Bluder said.

Creighton won the rebounding battle over Iowa (24-8) in convincing fashion. The Bluejays out rebounded the Hawkeyes, 52-37. After Creighton jumped out in front 23-17 at the end of the first quarter, it felt like Iowa was battling uphill the rest of the afternoon.

In the second quarter, Iowa star sophomore guard and Big Ten Player of the Year Caitlin Clark knocked down her second 3-pointer of the day to bring the Hawkeyes back within 28-23. Creighton responded with a 10-3 run to grab the Bluejays’ biggest lead of 12 points at 38-26. During that 10-3 run by Creighton, Clark connected on what would be her final made 3-pointer of the season at the 3:54 mark of the second quarter.

Iowa closed the first half on a 6-0 run of their own to close the deficit to 38-32 at halftime. Early in the fourth quarter, it looked as if Iowa might finally be poised to take command and pull away from Creighton. Iowa junior guard Gabbie Marshall drilled back-to-back 3-pointers to put Iowa in front 56-54 with 6:53 remaining. That was the Hawkeyes’ first lead in the contest since Clark’s jumper fell to put Iowa in front 15-14 with 5:11 left in the first quarter.

In the final 2:48, though, it was Jensen that hit a jumper to pull Creighton back within two, drove inside for a game-tying layup and then, of course, hit the game-winning 3-pointer.

Iowa senior forward Monika Czinano was fantastic all afternoon long and finished with 27 points on 12-for-20 field goal shooting. In fact, she was a perfect 6-for-6 on her first six attempts from the field. With that in mind, it made sense that the play on Iowa’s final possession was set up for Czinano. She got a post-up touch inside off the inbounds pass, turned and left what would have been the game-tying shot for Iowa short. The Hawkeyes had a pair of put-back opportunities off Czinano’s miss, but those didn’t find the mark either.

“Yeah, I think I had a hook shot. I’ve shot a million hook shots in my life and that one happened to not go in. I think we’ve run that play a lot. We needed to run that play, and it was just unfortunate that it didn’t go in,” Czinano said.

It’s a disappointing end to a season that saw Iowa share the Big Ten regular season crown, win a Big Ten Tournament championship, earn a No. 2 seed in the Greensboro region, but fail to reach the tournament’s second weekend. Clark, a national player of the year candidate, wasn’t going to focus on all of the negatives.

“I thought we battled and battled and battled. Obviously didn’t perform the way we needed to to win in the fashion that we wanted, and I think we still had a lot of opportunities to win the game. But overall they executed down the stretch and we didn’t, and there’s a lot of little things that you can go back and pick out from a one-possession game. And I think it’s overall just going to be a lot of fuel to the fire next year. I think that’s really all you can use it as. Obviously we’re frustrated, we’re disappointed, we’re sad, but we have our core coming back, and I think that’s something bright to look forward to, as well,” Clark said.

Iowa does bring plenty of firepower back and it’s headlined by Clark. While the season ends in frustrating fashion, Iowa can take solace in the type of team it will field in the 2022-23 season.

Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Josh on Twitter: @JoshOnREF

Iowa women’s basketball, Caitlin Clark roll in NCAA Tournament opener over Illinois State

Caitlin Clark dropped 27 points in front of a sellout crowd at Carver-Hawkeye Arena as second-seeded Iowa rolled Illinois State, 98-58.

Illinois State jumped out to a quick 9-4 lead about four minutes into Friday afternoon’s NCAA Tournament opener after the Redbirds’ Juliunn Redmond hit a jumper. Second-seeded Iowa (24-7, 14-4 Big Ten) didn’t waste any more time after that bringing the sellout Carver-Hawkeye Arena crowd to its feet.

Sophomore guard and national player of the year candidate Caitlin Clark connected on her first of two made 3-pointers on the afternoon to pull Iowa back within a bucket, and, with that Clark make, the Hawkeyes were off and running. Illinois State (19-14) answered right back with a 3-pointer from Mary Crompton, but Iowa junior guard Gabbie Marshall drilled a trey of her own on the next trip down the floor.

Then, Hawkeye junior guard McKenna Warnock tied the game with a layup, Marshall gave Iowa its second lead of the afternoon on a 3-pointer with 3:41 remaining in the first quarter and the Hawkeyes ended the game’s opening quarter on a 17-6 scoring run.

After outscoring Illinois State 22-14 in the second quarter, the Hawkeyes really came alive in the third quarter. Iowa canned 8-of-10 3-point tries to balloon the lead to 74-47. When the 98-58 Hawkeyes’ victory was all said and done, Iowa had registered its most points in an NCAA Tournament game in program history.

The Hawkeyes shot 60 percent from the floor and 46.2 percent from 3-point range. Iowa also hit 20-of-21 from the free throw line to record the Hawkeyes’ best percentage finish from the charity stripe in an NCAA Tournament game.

Clark had another banner day, finishing with 27 points, 10 assists and six rebounds. It was the West Des Moine product’s 25th career double-double and 16th of the season. Iowa senior forward Monika Czinano added 18 points and was a perfect 6-for-6 shooting from the floor to go with a perfect 6-for-6 from the free throw line. Marshall and senior guard Tomi Taiwo each chipped in 13 points.

“I mean, obviously very excited about this game. Almost scoring 100 points out here tonight. We shot the ball well from all areas. Two, three, free throw line. I think we had 23 assists on 30, or 25 assists on 33 baskets. I love that style. Really sharing the ball really well. Only have 11 turnovers today, so that was great to see. I thought it was a really good game, especially with a couple weeks off here. I was worried about that rust, and I don’t think we really showed any signs of that today.

“But I really want to thank the crowd that came out. I mean, our fans were amazing. Our fans, you know, they braved parking problems today, they braved rain, and they still got here. We are so appreciative of them. But just come again on Sunday. It’s going to be easier. No hospital traffic and no rain let’s hope,” Iowa head women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder said.

Iowa converted 13 Illinois State turnovers into 23 points and also outscored the Redbirds 24-2 in fast break points.

“Yeah, I think transition is always our best offense. We want to get to that no matter what. Obviously defending in transition is an area that we can still improve and get better at so it’s great to hear that we only gave up two points in transition. But yeah, I think that’s our best offense.

“I thought we got a lot of great contributions off the bench. Obviously, Tomi shot the ball well, Addy came in, so that always helps as well. But yeah, overall our transition offense when we’re doing it the way we should and when we get stops on the defensive end, that just leads to our transition offense. Hands down our best offense and that’s what we like to get to the most,” Clark said.

Iowa advances in the Greensboro region and will meet No. 10 seed Creighton in the second round after the Bluejays beat Colorado, 84-74. The Hawkeyes play at home inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Sunday versus Creighton.

Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Josh on Twitter: @JoshOnREF