
Kate Martin reflects upon first Caitlin Clark impression
Kate Martin reflects upon first Caitlin Clark impression
In a recent recording of the "Bird's Eye View podcast with Sue Bird," former Iowa women's basketball guard Kate Martin spoke on her experience playing alongside Caitlin Clark when the two current WNBA stars were teammates on the Hawkeyes from 2020-24.
Martin, who spent five years at Iowa, thanks to the extra year of eligibility granted due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, finished her tenure averaging 8.0 points per game on 46.4% from the floor, including 35.5% from 3-point territory, and 82.4% from the charity stripe through 139 starts in 163 games. Martin also averaged 4.6 rebounds, 2.9 assists, 0.9 steals, and 0.1 blocks per contest throughout her career in Iowa City.
Most notably, Martin's best offensive season at Iowa was during the 2023-24 campaign when she averaged 13.1 points per game on 50.7% from the floor, including 37.0% from beyond the arc, and 86.4% from the free-throw line, en route to the Hawkeyes' second consecutive appearance in the National Championship game.
When Bird asked what her first impression of Clark was when the Hawkeyes recruited the eventual program-altering guard, Martin explained that she did not know much about Clark's skillset outside of film, but was amazed by her ability to live up to the hype.
"Yeah, she had come on a couple of visits, and she was like a big name in Iowa. So I had heard about her. I wasn't from Iowa, so I didn't know as much, and that, like, All-Iowa Attack AAU program is, like, so big, and I'd never heard of it," Martin explained. "And so I had heard about this Caitlin Clark, and I was, like, watching videos of her just have like 40 points, averaging a million in high school, and I was like, 'oh, this girl thinks she's going to come here and rule the world.' And there she did, came in right away and ruled the world, and I was like, all right, here we go."
Martin continued by explaining that she was in awe of Clark's ability to become an immediate game-changer on the court for the team during her freshman year and eventually alter the trajectory of the program moving forward.
"I just remember you have that summer before, and she was doing things that I had never seen anybody do before. And as a freshman, to come in and have that kind of confidence, like, not everybody has that. I was like, I haven't really seen anything like this. And so we knew she was going to be outstanding. And then, yeah, at the beginning of the year, we had some big wins, and there were highs and lows that year for sure. But, you know, it took us a little bit to figure it out. But, yeah, it obviously turned out better than I could have ever expected or thought."
With the two now in their second WNBA season, Hawkeyes fans can proudly watch both stars shine on their respective teams as Clark headlines the Indiana Fever and Martin provides a sharp-shooting offensive jolt off the bench for the Golden State Valkyries.
Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes and opinions. Follow Scout on X: @SpringgateNews

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
WNBA's TV ratings drop with Fever's Caitlin Clark sidelined due to injury: report
The WNBA has seen a significant drop in TV ratings while Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark remains sidelined with a quad injury. Clark has missed five straight games after she strained a quadriceps during the Fever's 90-88 loss to the New York Liberty last month. Initially, she was expected to miss two weeks, but the second-year guard has yet to be cleared for Saturday's game against the Liberty, which will mark three weeks. Her absence on the court has not only hurt the Fever. It's hurt the WNBA's TV ratings. USA Today reported Thursday that, according to Nielsen data, nationally televised WNBA viewership is down 55% since Clark was injured May 24. The report said nationally televised Fever games are also down 53%. OutKick clarified those numbers, reporting that of the four previous games Clark played in, two were aired on CBS and ABC. A third was broadcast on NBA TV, and a fourth was not rated by Nielsen because it was broadcast on Amazon Prime. Three of the four Fever games after Clark was injured were aired on either NBA TV or ION. And the Fever's most recent game against the Chicago Sky drew an average of 1.92 million viewers, the WNBA announced Tuesday. Those numbers reflect the third-highest viewership for a game carried by CBS. It was also a big increase over the network's average regular season game viewership. But it was a drop from the season opener between those two teams. Fever head coach Stephanie White said Monday the team is ready for Clark to start "ramping back up," but she did not say if she was cleared yet for basketball activities. White added Thursday that Clark and Sophie Cunningham, who's been sidelined since May 30, had "limited" reps during practice. Clark is averaging 19 points, 9.3 assists and six rebounds in four games this season. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Caitlin Clark's biceps and the bigger conversation around women and muscles
Thanks to a strain that's left her sidelined for weeks, all eyes are on Caitlin Clark's quad right now. But it's the Indiana Fever star's arms that had people talking in the days leading up to her second WNBA season. It all started in March, when 23-year-old Clark was photographed cheering on her alma mater, the Iowa Hawkeyes, during the NCAA Big Ten tournament. 'Okkkkk hello arms!' one commenter wrote, adding a flexed bicep emoji in reaction to the point guard's noticeably muscular appearance. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Bri Lewerke (@brilewerkephoto) Those muscles were on display when Clark's team photo was released in early May, prompting side-by-side comparisons to her 2024 physique. According to Clark herself, she's been intentionally bulking up since last year. 'I try to put on some weight and I've been working hard in the weight room,' she told reporters in August. That ramped up in the offseason, per the Fever's head athletic performance coach, Sarah Kessler, who told ESPN that Clark was in the weight room four to five times a week. Cue the toned courtside pic that got tongues wagging in March — and a lot of body discourse that not everyone is comfortable with. 'Speculating about women's bodies generally and speculation of women athletes' bodies is not new,' Michelle Manno, a sociologist, associate provost for community enrichment at Northwestern University and the author of Denied: Women, Sports and the Contradictions of Identity, tells Yahoo Life. 'What stands out as new to me in this case is that the speculation is positive. … For the most part, we're seeing people applauding [Clark's] effort to get stronger and gain muscles between seasons.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Caitlin Clark (@caitlinclark22) Indeed, adjectives like 'beautiful' have been used alongside 'jacked' and 'ripped' as commenters weigh in on Clark's muscles. One X user hailed her as having the 'peak female athlete form,' while an Instagram commenter wrote, 'Girl you show off those muscles. You worked hard on those. Lookin' great.' According to Mikala Jamison, author of the newsletter Body Type, those compliments are a sign of evolving standards. 'It's hard to overstate how much conversations about women and their musculature has changed,' she tells Yahoo Life. She references a survey done by writer Leigh Peele in 2009 (which Jamison wrote about in 2022) in which 2,000 women were polled on their views about weightlifting and the attractiveness of muscles. The majority of those surveyed indicated that they didn't like the look of muscles on their own bodies and figured men didn't find it attractive either. A majority also said they'd rather be 'too thin than either too fat or too muscular,' and when asked which female celebrity exemplified the 'muscular/bulky' look, many chose Hilary Swank (43%) and Jessica Biel (36%). 'There was this sense that any shade of muscularity on a woman's body wasn't something that, at least per this survey, was desired by a lot of women. And there are a thousand reasons for that in the culture and in media messaging,' says Jamison. 'But that has definitely changed over the years, and you see that in things like more women strength training regularly than ever before.' A growing interest in lifting weights, eating more protein and paying more attention to the benefits of building muscle has roots in conversations about menopause and aging. However, the reaction to Clark's body in particular seems to be an indication that the positive messaging about stronger bodies could be reaching and influencing younger women as well. The focus on Clark's muscles follows a general shift in gears in terms of how female athletes — and their bodies — are being discussed. 'People were talking about this a lot during the [2024] Olympics with Ilona Maher,' says Jamison, referring to the U.S. women's rugby player who won bronze in Paris last summer. 'She was on the cover of Sports Illustrated and she's not a super-slender, super-skinny woman. She's very muscular.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sports Illustrated Swimsuit (@si_swimsuit) After nabbing the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit digital cover last fall, Maher donned a bikini again to pose for the pages of the magazine's recently released 2025 print issue, which quotes her as saying, 'I hope people see my photos and understand that strength can be so beautiful and so feminine.' The latest issue has won praise for featuring various female athletes, including fellow Olympians Jordan Chiles and Gabby Thomas. 'How different my and many other women's lives would be if these strong bodies were the center of attention when I was growing up,' one fan commented. 'If you see more different types, sizes and shapes of bodies, it gives any person who is seeing those body types an understanding that there are many different ways that your body could look, or maybe that you want your body to look like,' Jamison points out. But even still, who people praise is dependent on certain standards. 'If I think about athletes like Serena Williams or Brittney Griner, the commentary around their bodies throughout the course of their careers has been pretty uniformly negative,' says Manno. 'So when I see what's happening with Caitlin Clark, I have to think that her race and her gender expression' — i.e., being a white, straight woman — 'are really helping her in this moment.' At the end of the day, the beauty standard for any and all women continues to be a tight line to walk, especially for those in sports, according to Manno. 'A lot of women athletes still navigate this very strong tension between wanting to be strong, wanting to do the things that they need to do to excel at their sport and still be accepted societally as looking, quote-unquote, appropriately feminine enough,' she says.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Beloved Alabama Restaurant Rama Jama's Loses Famed Championship Wall
A restaurant in Alabama built a wall honoring the state's football championships. Rama Jama's restaurant, which is known as a "game day staple," filled its dining room "with the most obscure Crimson Tide memorabilia," according to Outside stood a wall commemorating the state's football prowess. But now its championship wall has crumbled. "Today's storm took down a piece of Tuscaloosa history. We lost our National Championship wall today," Rama Jama wrote on its Facebook page, sharing a photo showing the damage. A person commiserated on the comment thread, writing, "It's ok, you will have to replace it with a much bigger wall to add all the future Championships." "And the walls came tumbling down," wrote another. The restaurant stood "in the shadow of Bryant-Denny stadium" since 1996, reported. That stadium is on the campus of the University of Alabama. According to the newspaper, the wall showed up in the background of ESPN broadcasts that sometimes occurred in the restaurant's parking lot. The national championship wall "commemorated each of the Crimson Tide's 18 titles" and included quotes from "CBS Sports and Southern Living Magazine praising the food at Rama Jama's," reported. "Welcome to Rama-Jama's, where culinary excellence meets the heart of the Crimson Tide experience," the website says. "Nestled just outside the iconic Bryant-Denny Stadium, we take pride in being more than just a restaurant – we are a tradition, a gathering place, and a celebration of the vibrant spirit that defines Alabama football."Beloved Alabama Restaurant Rama Jama's Loses Famed Championship Wall first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 12, 2025