By D. Allan Kerr
During this past Super Bowl Sunday, featuring two immensely talented and entertaining football teams, I found myself obsessed with a female college basketball player.
Thatβs a sentence I never expected to write in my life. Such is the universal appeal of University of Iowa guard Caitlin Clark.
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I canβt pretend to know much about womenβs basketball, and until recently I was just casually aware of Clarkβs existence. But that week, as she closed in on the NCAAβs all-time womenβs scoring record, her name kept popping up everywhere I looked. The extensive coverage reminded me of baseball great Hank Aaronβs home run chase decades ago.

This 22-year-old Iowa native has been single-handedly drawing huge crowds in arenas across the country, and repeatedly steps up to the moment.
She leads the nation in scoring, averaging 32 points a game, and already appears in national TV commercials with the likes of former NBA superstar Reggie Miller.
The girl is a killer from 3-point range and a maestro of the passing game, and she brings a pirateβs swagger to the court. Like soccer hero Megan Rapinoe, sheβs becoming the face of her sport, transcending into mainstream America.
Even Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, the very week he was preparing for what became one of the most legendary performances of his career, was asked about Clarkβs exploits during a pre-Super Bowl press conference.
He turned out to be a big fanboy of the budding young superstar, and started to call her βone of the best womenβs basketballβ before catching himself and amending his comment to βone of the best college basketball players to ever play!β
Clark needed 39 points against Nebraska to break the milestone on Super Bowl Sunday. She wound up falling short, scoring βonlyβ 31 in an upset loss. But that just enabled her accomplish the feat in front of her home fans in Iowa on Feb. 15, exploding for a school-record 49 points along with 13 assists.
Fittingly, she shattered the old mark with an insane shot almost from mid-court, and then proceeded to score 41 more. Β
The funny thing is, I also was struck by the total domination of female musicians during the Grammy Awards ceremony held the previous Sunday.
As a guy whose sonic preference is rooted in the heydays of Springsteen, Seger, Mellencamp and Petty, Iβm not exactly in tune with todayβs music and donβt know most of the current artists, so didnβt watch the televised show. But the following morning, I saw women had pretty much swept all the major awards.
In addition, the live performances generating the most buzz afterward were also from kick-ass chicks, especially 80-year-old legend Joni Mitchellβs rendition of βBoth Sides Nowβ and Miley Cyrus strutting the stage singing βFlowers,β her potent empowerment anthem.

The duet of Tracy Chapman and Luke Combs on the classic βFast Carβ also received lots of love, and even that was mainly because of Chapmanβs long overdue return to the spotlight.
Obviously, we had amazing women performers before this century. Even when I was rocking out to Springsteen and Mellencamp in my youth, I always had time for such powerhouses as the glorious Pat Benatar and the pioneering Wilson sisters of the band Heart. But they were more the exception than the rule.
Today it seems as though almost all the interesting new music I hear is being created by female artists.
Taylor Swift, who just became the first singer in history to win four Best Album Grammys, gets the most attention now as, essentially, the queen of the entire planet. But weβre also being treated to amazing stuff from ladies like Cyrus, Beyonce, Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande, Lizzo, Olivia Rodrigo and the remarkable Billie Eilish.
There are many others who should probably be listed here, but these are the ones with whom Iβm most familiar.
If weβre being honest, these chicks are way more fascinating than most of their male counterparts right now.

While such domination hasnβt yet carried over into the film industry, it seems like women are making huge strides there as well.
Actress/producer Margot Robbie and director/writer Greta Gerwig teamed up to make βBarbie,β one of the most original and astounding successes in cinematic history. Now Robbieβs production company, LuckyChap, has entered into a major deal with Warner Brothers to create other projects.
Academy Award-winning actress Reese Witherspoon is a longtime favorite in our household, but she also has racked up an impressive run as executive producer of high-quality TV series including βBig Little Lies,β βThe Morning Show,β βDaisy Jones and the Six,β and the docuseries βSurf Girls Hawaii,β which my wife likes a lot. Β
Right now, weβre both hooked on the latest compelling season of βTrue Detective,β featuring two badass female leads: former boxing champ Kali Reis and Hollywood royalty Jodie Foster, who also produced the series. They portray Alaskan cops who drink, brawl, fornicate voraciously and dispense justice the way they see fit, traits usually personified by rugged male stars.
Again, these women are not the first to accomplish such things. Katharine Hepburn famously obtained the film rights to βThe Philadelphia Storyβ as a vehicle to establish herself once and for all as one of Americaβs biggest movie stars back in 1940. Oprahβs had her own network (pun intended) for more than a decade.
But those women are pioneers. Now we hear such stories in ever-expanding numbers, almost to the point theyβre considered unremarkable. And today women are achieving unimaginable heights.
Getting back to Clark, who can dispute sheβs currently the most recognizable college athlete, regardless of gender, in the entire country? In fact, who even comes close? And when has a female athlete ever before been able to make such a claim?
Maybe this is all resonating with me because I have a daughter now, and a granddaughter.
If theyβre able to grow up seeing women doing things unimaginable even a hundred years ago, maybe they can pursue their own goals unfettered by the expectations and shackles of previous generations of women.
Follow D. Allan Kerr on Seacoastonline.com, Facebook and the Sloth Blog Threads and Twitter (yeah, weβre still calling it Twitter.)


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