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Legend of Caitlin Clark began with competitive, sometimes bloody Nerf basketball battles against her brothers

Legend of Caitlin Clark began with competitive, sometimes bloody Nerf basketball battles against her brothers
Before she was dominating the top women in America. She was *** little kid schooling the boys. Her dad, Brent couldn't find *** girls league at that age. So she was the boys problem in West Des Moines. I think it was the second grade, uh, ***, *** U state tournament. It was *** boys tournament. Well, they ended up winning the tournament. One of the mothers complained because *** girl shouldn't be allowed to play in ***, in *** boys tournament. So I always kind of chuckle about that. I can just remember her doing things in 3rd and 4th grade that were pretty special. By the time she started ninth grade, she was *** nationally known star with the *** *** U club, all Iowa attack coach, Kristen Meyer just started that year at downing calls from coaches, division one coaches before her freshman year of high school. And they had seen her play, you know, obviously in the *** U circuit and they were predicting her to be, I mean, top level. Some of them said that even as *** freshman in high school, they could have played on their D one team, then it started kind of clicking for me. I mean, she was the leading scorer and led the state and score. I believe her junior and senior year she sees the game differently than anyone I've ever met. The game is slower for her. And since getting to Iowa star status, her jaw dropping plays and statistical feats are leading Sports center getting tweets from K D and Steph Curry and have the kid from West Des Moines poised to win national player of the year. Knowing how hard she works at her game and her love for the game and her passion. I'm not surprised either. She's always been, oh, that's Brent's daughter. When did it become? Oh, you're Caitlin's dad and I had *** guy after the Indiana game at Indiana. You know, he, he knew he could see that I was Caitlin's dad. So he kind of followed me around *** little bit and then he came up and said, could you have Caitlin sign my little basketball? And I said, well, it's gonna be tough because I don't know the media obligations. Then he just asked me point blank. Would you sign my basketball?
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Legend of Caitlin Clark began with competitive, sometimes bloody Nerf basketball battles against her brothers
Caitlin Clark’s skills were so advanced when she was in grade school that her parents signed her up to play on boys teams. By the time she entered middle school she was well-known in basketball circles across Iowa.This was long before Clark became one of the faces of women’s basketball and, now, on the cusp of setting the NCAA Division I scoring record.Clark was in sixth grade when Jan Jensen first heard about her. Not long after, Iowa’s associate head coach and chief recruiter went to watch the prodigy from West Des Moines.Video above: Caitlin Clark's dad, high school coach reflect on her early basketball careerShe saw a confident player making pinpoint passes often too hot for her teammates to handle, someone who was creative on drives to the hoop and of course someone willing to launch the deep 3-pointers that would become her signature and one of the reasons she’s one of the United States’ highest-profile female athletes.“It didn’t take but a second, maybe a minute,” Jensen said. “That little step-back sassy 3, this little seventh-, eighth-grader. Yeah, she’s diff. You could just tell. They’re easy to identify but really hard to get. Everybody can see the true, true ones. The trick is to get them.”Clark needs 8 points to break the NCAA career record of 3,527 by Washington’s Kelsey Plum (2013-17). The Hawkeyes host Michigan on Thursday. With an average of 32.4 points per game, there's little doubt she'll break it against the Wolverines.“I didn’t predict this to happen, but just knowing her work ethic, knowing her passion for the sport, knowing her fearlessness, I’m really not surprised,” said Kristin Meyer, who coached Clark from 2016-20 at Dowling Catholic High in West Des Moines. “More than anything, I’m so happy for her to get to accomplish all of these things, to grow the sport and to grow the popularity of women’s basketball and also the state of Iowa.”'Very special night': Caitlin Clark looks ahead to Thursday's game when she should break NCAA scoring recordThere is crying in basketballThe daughter of Brent Clark and Anne Nizzi-Clark grew up as the middle child in a sports-centric family. Caitlin said when she first started playing basketball, she would cry after every game her team lost.“That’s because of how much I cared,” she said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I’m like 6 years old and it didn’t matter, obviously. But it mattered to me.”That passion for winning took root when she and brothers Blake and Colin played board games and all kinds of sports against each other. She recalled a basement Nerf basketball game with Colin that got overheated.“I just threw him into the wall,” she said. “He went flying and his head slapped into it. He put his hand back and it was just full of blood. He runs upstairs to my mom. She goes and gets a bunch of staples in his head.”High cost to see history: Iowa basketball tickets selling for record pricesHistoric four years at DowlingMeyer was preparing for her first year as Dowling High coach in 2016 when she first heard about a “stud eighth-grader” who would be joining the team.“I was, ‘OK, that’s nice. We’ll have a good player,’” Meyer said.And then she went to watch Clark’s AAU club the spring before her freshman year — “Oh, she’s real good,” Meyer remembers thinking — and realized she would build her first team around Clark.Coaching Clark was sometimes a challenge, Meyer said, because she was so advanced in her skills and basketball IQ. As has happened during her career at Iowa, Clark would show frustration if the target of one of her passes wasn’t ready to catch it or if a play didn’t unfold as designed.“There were times the competitiveness of her kind of took over or she wasn’t as patient,” Meyer said, “but every high schooler has to grow through some things and, looking back, her skill level was on a different level than other people, so it was harder for her at times.”Clark, who never won a high school state title, ranks No. 4 on the Iowa high school five-on-five career scoring chart with 2,547 points. Many Iowa schools played six-on-six into the 1980s and ’90s.Clark’s AAU team, the All-Iowa Attack, won the 2018 Nike GEYBL national championship and was runner-up in 2017 and 2019. She won gold medals at the international level with the USA Under 16 and U19 teams.'Historic day': Hear from Iowa basketball coach Lisa Bluder ahead of Caitlin Clark breaking scoring recordDisappointment before greatnessOne of her few disappointments — and another source of motivation — came the summer after her sophomore season when she was left off the 12-player roster for the USA U17 team.“She’s one who loves a challenge and then responds to it,” Meyer said. “She took a big step between her sophomore and junior year, and a lot of that was due to not making the team.”Clark was Gatorade National Player of the Year after averaging 32.6 points per game as a junior. Her defining high school game came late that season at Mason City, where she made a state-record 13 3-pointers, on 17 attempts, and scored 60 points, one off the state record.HIGHLIGHTS: Caitlin Clark scores 60 points against Mason CityBy then, Clark was a consensus five-star prospect and receiving attention from almost every major program. The Hawkeyes ultimately won out over Notre Dame.Megan Meyer (no relation to Kristin), who played AAU ball with Clark and was her teammate at Iowa for a year, was one of the Mason City players who tried to defend her. Mason City was no pushover, and most of Clark’s shots were contested in the 32-minute game.“I remember thinking, ‘How in the world can somebody score 60 points in a high school basketball game?’” Megan Meyer said.Clark hit six 3s and scored 25 points in the first quarter alone. Almost every shot was contested. When the game ended, the Mason City student section lined up to get her autograph, same as fans do after Iowa games now.“That game, I’m sure, had a lot of foreshadowing of what was to come,” Jensen said.WATCH: Caitlin Clark's impact on her high school teammatesCaitlin Clark in the newsMore Caitlin Clark videosCaitlin Clark gifts Iowa girl with signed shoesCaitlin Clark fever takes over Principal ParkCaitlin Clark visits Dowling Catholic basketball campDowling star Caitlin Clark picks her college

Caitlin Clark’s skills were so advanced when she was in grade school that her parents signed her up to play on boys teams. By the time she entered middle school she was well-known in basketball circles across Iowa.

This was long before Clark became one of the faces of women’s basketball and, now, on the cusp of setting the NCAA Division I scoring record.

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Clark was in sixth grade when Jan Jensen first heard about her. Not long after, Iowa’s associate head coach and chief recruiter went to watch the prodigy from West Des Moines.

Video above: Caitlin Clark's dad, high school coach reflect on her early basketball career

She saw a confident player making pinpoint passes often too hot for her teammates to handle, someone who was creative on drives to the hoop and of course someone willing to launch the deep 3-pointers that would become her signature and one of the reasons she’s one of the United States’ highest-profile female athletes.

“It didn’t take but a second, maybe a minute,” Jensen said. “That little step-back sassy 3, this little seventh-, eighth-grader. Yeah, she’s diff. You could just tell. They’re easy to identify but really hard to get. Everybody can see the true, true ones. The trick is to get them.”

Clark needs 8 points to break the NCAA career record of 3,527 by Washington’s Kelsey Plum (2013-17). The Hawkeyes host Michigan on Thursday. With an average of 32.4 points per game, there's little doubt she'll break it against the Wolverines.

“I didn’t predict this to happen, but just knowing her work ethic, knowing her passion for the sport, knowing her fearlessness, I’m really not surprised,” said Kristin Meyer, who coached Clark from 2016-20 at Dowling Catholic High in West Des Moines. “More than anything, I’m so happy for her to get to accomplish all of these things, to grow the sport and to grow the popularity of women’s basketball and also the state of Iowa.”

'Very special night': Caitlin Clark looks ahead to Thursday's game when she should break NCAA scoring record

There is crying in basketball

The daughter of Brent Clark and Anne Nizzi-Clark grew up as the middle child in a sports-centric family. Caitlin said when she first started playing basketball, she would cry after every game her team lost.

“That’s because of how much I cared,” she said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I’m like 6 years old and it didn’t matter, obviously. But it mattered to me.”

That passion for winning took root when she and brothers Blake and Colin played board games and all kinds of sports against each other. She recalled a basement Nerf basketball game with Colin that got overheated.

“I just threw him into the wall,” she said. “He went flying and his head slapped into it. He put his hand back and it was just full of blood. He runs upstairs to my mom. She goes and gets a bunch of staples in his head.”

High cost to see history: Iowa basketball tickets selling for record prices

Historic four years at Dowling

Meyer was preparing for her first year as Dowling High coach in 2016 when she first heard about a “stud eighth-grader” who would be joining the team.

“I was, ‘OK, that’s nice. We’ll have a good player,’” Meyer said.

This photo provided by Dowling Catholic High School shows basketball player Caitlin Clark with head coach Kristin Meyer at the girls state tournament at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa,  Feb. 25, 2020. Clark is now on the cusp of becoming Division I women&apos&#x3B;s basketball&apos&#x3B;s all-time leading scorer. An early sign of how her career would evolve happened when she was a high school junior. In a game against Mason City she scored 60 points and made 13 3-pointers on 17 attempts. (Earl Hulst/Dowling High School via AP)
Earl Hulst
This photo provided by Dowling Catholic High School shows basketball player Caitlin Clark with head coach Kristin Meyer at the girls state tournament at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa, Feb. 25, 2020. Clark is now on the cusp of becoming Division I women’s basketball’s all-time leading scorer. An early sign of how her career would evolve happened when she was a high school junior. In a game against Mason City she scored 60 points and made 13 3-pointers on 17 attempts. 

And then she went to watch Clark’s AAU club the spring before her freshman year — “Oh, she’s real good,” Meyer remembers thinking — and realized she would build her first team around Clark.

Coaching Clark was sometimes a challenge, Meyer said, because she was so advanced in her skills and basketball IQ. As has happened during her career at Iowa, Clark would show frustration if the target of one of her passes wasn’t ready to catch it or if a play didn’t unfold as designed.

“There were times the competitiveness of her kind of took over or she wasn’t as patient,” Meyer said, “but every high schooler has to grow through some things and, looking back, her skill level was on a different level than other people, so it was harder for her at times.”

Clark, who never won a high school state title, ranks No. 4 on the Iowa high school five-on-five career scoring chart with 2,547 points. Many Iowa schools played six-on-six into the 1980s and ’90s.

Clark’s AAU team, the All-Iowa Attack, won the 2018 Nike GEYBL national championship and was runner-up in 2017 and 2019. She won gold medals at the international level with the USA Under 16 and U19 teams.

'Historic day': Hear from Iowa basketball coach Lisa Bluder ahead of Caitlin Clark breaking scoring record

Disappointment before greatness

One of her few disappointments — and another source of motivation — came the summer after her sophomore season when she was left off the 12-player roster for the USA U17 team.

“She’s one who loves a challenge and then responds to it,” Meyer said. “She took a big step between her sophomore and junior year, and a lot of that was due to not making the team.”

Clark was Gatorade National Player of the Year after averaging 32.6 points per game as a junior. Her defining high school game came late that season at Mason City, where she made a state-record 13 3-pointers, on 17 attempts, and scored 60 points, one off the state record.

HIGHLIGHTS: Caitlin Clark scores 60 points against Mason City

By then, Clark was a consensus five-star prospect and receiving attention from almost every major program. The Hawkeyes ultimately won out over Notre Dame.

Megan Meyer (no relation to Kristin), who played AAU ball with Clark and was her teammate at Iowa for a year, was one of the Mason City players who tried to defend her. Mason City was no pushover, and most of Clark’s shots were contested in the 32-minute game.

“I remember thinking, ‘How in the world can somebody score 60 points in a high school basketball game?’” Megan Meyer said.

Clark hit six 3s and scored 25 points in the first quarter alone. Almost every shot was contested. When the game ended, the Mason City student section lined up to get her autograph, same as fans do after Iowa games now.

“That game, I’m sure, had a lot of foreshadowing of what was to come,” Jensen said.

WATCH: Caitlin Clark's impact on her high school teammates

Caitlin Clark in the news

More Caitlin Clark videos

Caitlin Clark gifts Iowa girl with signed shoes

Caitlin Clark fever takes over Principal Park

Caitlin Clark visits Dowling Catholic basketball camp

Dowling star Caitlin Clark picks her college