Caitlin Clark Breaks NCAA Scoring Record Set By ‘Pistol Pete’ Maravich

By  Daniel Chaitin – Mar 3, 2024   DailyWire.com

College basketball player Caitlin Clark surpassed “Pistol Pete” Maravich on Sunday to break the NCAA’s all-time scoring record that has stood for more than half a century.

The history-making shots happened during a face-off between Clark’s No. 6 Iowa and No. 2 Ohio State during her team’s final regular home season game this season.

With a pair of free throws, the 22-year-old senior rose above the 3,667 point benchmark set by Maravich in 1970.

Loud cheers erupted in the arena when Clark made the second shot. The Iowa Hawkeyes went on to win the contest by a 93-83 score.

Clark, an Iowa native, is a guard for the Hawkeyes in her fourth season. Her accomplishment on Sunday was met with widespread praise, including from high-profile politicians from her home state.

“History is made! Congrats to all-time leading scorer [Caitlin Clark],” Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) said in a post on X.

“Caitlin Clark cements herself as the gr8est college bball player EVER as she breaks the all time scoring record The pride of Iowa & leader of a gr8 Hawkeye wbb TEAM,” Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) said a post to X. “Congrats to Clark The GOAT.”

Though Clark has now surpassed Maravich, there have been some changes in college basketball since he played for LSU from the late 1960s to 1970.

Maravich participated in college hoops at a time before freshman eligibility for varsity teams. And though Maravich was known to be a long-range bomber, he played while limited to two-point shots.

Sports Illustrated said the NCAA did not universally adopt the three-pointer until 1986. Maravich died from a heart attack in 1988 at the age of 40 following 10 years in the NBA, where he first got a chance to play with a three-point shot toward the end of his career, NBA.com noted.

My cmnt: Poor Pete Maravich. Here he dies of heart failure from the Covid-19 mRNA vaccine years before it was even invented! The vaccine is so dangerous to the hearts of young athletes it reaches back in time and kills them.

Last week, Clark broke the record for the most points scored in major women’s college basketball, beating the 3,649 mark set by Lynette Woodard when she played for Kansas from 1977 to 1981.

Clark, who also boasts NIL partnerships and three gold medalsannounced on Thursday that she will be entering the WNBA Draft.

My cmnt: Where she will have to overcome two additional obstacles. The racism against white basketball players, especially the super stars, and the animosity of bull-dyke wrath against straight women who make it to the WNBA and also have men who actually want to date and marry them.

In the meantime, the Hawkeyes are gearing up for another March Madness tournament after being defeated by LSU in the championship game in last year’s contest.

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Who is Caitlin Clark’s boyfriend? All about Connor McCaffery

Connor McCaffery might just be the University of Iowa player’s biggest fan. 

Feb. 28, 2024, 5:59 PM CST / Source: TODAY – By Ree Hines for Today.com

My cmnt: It is common knowledge (much like women’s prisons) that the WNBA is chock-full of lesbians, and not the pretty, lipstick lesbians who marry famous, rich women like Ellen DeGeneres, but the bull dyke ones who are bigger and taller than most men.

August 16, 2023: Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi celebrate 15 years of marriage. In honor of their wedding anniversary, DeGeneres penned a sweet post on Instagram about de Rossi. “To my wife of 15 years- I fall more in love with you every day,” she wrote. “My life is blessed because you’re in it.Dec 4, 2023

My cmnt: My point being that Caitlin Clark has a boyfriend whom she will probably marry and that makes her a target for harassment and abuse from the other women. My own cute, little blond sister was a P.E. major in college back in the 70s and surprised me one day when she said she was afraid to go into the women’s locker room alone because of the constant “attention” from the big, aggressive, dike athletes. I was shocked back in the 70s. Nowadays I completely understand her concern. Fast forward to 2019 when I worked in a public school with a former female professional basketball player who was married with two grown children. She told me that the lesbian-fueled harassment was so bad she had to switch colleges when playing and then quit the women’s professional league because they hated non-lesbians and especially non-lesbians who were married.

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