Iowa
Caitlin Clark Talks Returning to Iowa City, New WNBA Season
Caitlin Clark Talks Returning to Iowa City, New WNBA Season
On Sunday (3 PM CT, ESPN), Caitlin Clark will do something very familiar: put on a jersey, lace up her shoes, and dribble a basketball all over the parquet floor on Carver-Hawkeye Arena in front of a sold-out crowd of cheering fans.
The only differences? She’ll be in an Indiana Fever jersey instead of the black-and-gold Iowa uniform she made internationally famous during her four seasons at Iowa — and she’ll be passing to a different set of teammates than the likes of Kate Martin, Gabbie Marshall, and Hannah Stuelke.
Clark spoke about her return to Iowa City this week. She is, understandably, very excited about the opportunity to return to a place where she had so much success and created so many positive connections and good memories.
“I’m really excited, it should be fun,” Clark said. “I can’t believe it’s already here. I honestly haven’t been back to Iowa City a ton since I left a year ago now. Only been back a couple times — once for a football game, once for the jersey retirement.”
“So it’ll be fun to get back there, see some of my former teammates, [and] my friends that are there. A lot of my family will be coming — I know they’re excited,” Clark added.
As she noted, Clark was back in CHA just a few months ago, albeit not as a player, but as an alumnus being honored for her legendary playing career with the retirement of her jersey.
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She did have one word of warning for everyone planning to attend the Sunday afternoon (3 PM CT) game in Carver-Hawkeye Arena: CHA might turn into a bit of a hothouse.
“I warned everybody, there’s not air conditioning in Carver-Hawkeye. They don’t usually play basketball games in May,” she said with a laugh.
“Hopefully it stays a little cool in there. I don’t know what the humidity is looking like. We’ll see how it goes — it might be a little toasty. People at graduation when it’s in Carver get a little hot,” she said.
As Clark pointed out, Carver-Hawkeye Arena doesn’t have air conditioning — which usually isn’t a concern since it’s primarily used for activities between November and March. It does see regular use in May as a venue for graduation ceremonies, though; as someone who went through a graduation ceremony in CHA many (many) years ago, I can confirm that it can get rather warm in there in May. The current Sunday forecast is projecting a high of 71 degrees and minimal humidity.
Clark, entering her second year with the Fever, is the betting favorite to win the WNBA MVP award. Clark is a +195 favorite to win the MVP per BetMGM, ahead of the Las Vegas Aces’ A’ja Wilson (+210) and the Minnesota Lynx’s Napheesa Collier (+325). ESPN BET has Clark’s odds to win the MVP at +200, followed by Wilson at +235 and Collier at +400.
For her part, Clark is looking forward to things slowing down in Year 2 in the WNBA and being settled after the whirlwind experience that was her opening season in Indiana.
“I think there was just a lot coming at me last year at this time,” Clark noted. “I’m trying to move to a new a city, I’m living in a hotel, I’m trying to figure out my teammates, trying to figure out new coaches, how this league works. I played the last game of the college season, I played the first preseason game of the WNBA season, and then I played 11 games in 20 days.”
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“It was a lot to take in, it came at me fast. But I’m also really grateful for that experience, too, I think it taught me a lot about basketball, taught me a lot about myself, and how to be resilient and to come in and to work and to always get better,” she added. “I think for myself, just having a year under my belt [and] knowing what to expect [is big].”
“As long as we win, I’m going to be happy. [I] just [want to] be the best leader I can be, knowing that I have a year under my belt, I know what to expect. I’m the point guard, so people are going to be expecting a lot from me. I need to be there for my teammates, be an extension of [new head coach Stephanie White] on the court and just be a great leader and have a lot of fun doing it.”
The Fever made several moves in the offseason, including hiring Stephanie White, the former Connecticut Sun head coach who was an assistant coach on the 2012 Indiana Fever team that won a WNBA title. On the player front, the Fever added two-time WNBA All-Star and three-time WNBA champion Natasha Howard and six-time WNBA All-Star and two-time WNBA champion DeWanna Bonner via free agency and traded for Sophie Cunningham and Jaleyn Brown.
Clark likes what she’s seen from the new-look roster through the first few practices of the new season.
“Just through these first few days of practice, everybody’s been really great and it’s been so much fun,” she said. “You can tell everyone’s just been very selfless and excited to be here and excited to put things together to be a really successful team.”
Asked what success would look like this year, Clark was succinct:
“A championship.”
As she prepares for her second year in the WNBA, Clark expressed much more comfort now, having been through the whirlwind a year ago.
“I feel like I’m in a much better spot of understanding how the league works, what to expect, what the coaches and your teammates are going to expect of you,” she said.
“I’ve had a lot of time to rest and get better at things I want to get better at. All that being said, we have three more preseason games to practice and really get ready for our opener on May 17.”
On Sunday, thousands of fans who cheered on Clark for four years in Iowa City will get to celebrate her one more time — and see just how much she’s improved as she gets ready to contend in her second year in the professional ranks.
The Indiana Fever are scheduled to have their preseason opener against the Washington Mystics on Saturday, May 3 (12 PM CT, NBA TV). The Fever have their second preseason game against the Brazilian National Team in Iowa City on Sunday, May 4 (3 PM CT, ESPN).
Iowa
Iowa Supreme Court overturns doctor’s child sex abuse conviction
The Iowa Supreme Court’s 2025-2026 docket is filled with key cases
Iowa’s top court has a busy schedule as it launches into a new term this fall, delving into cases involving subjects including bullying and TikTok.
The Iowa Supreme Court has overturned the conviction of a West Des Moines doctor found guilty of sexually abusing a child, ruling that allowing the victim to testify via one-way video violated the Iowa Constitution.
The court on Tuesday, Dec. 23, reversed the conviction of Lynn Melvin Lindaman, a longtime central Iowa surgeon who practiced at the Lindaman Orthopaedics clinic in West Des Moines before he was charged in 2023 with second-degree sexual abuse. The case was remanded for a new trial.
The decision is the latest in a string of rulings that have set Iowa apart as the only state in the country whose highest court has barred one-way video testimony in criminal trials, even in cases involving child victims.
Those decisions already have begun reshaping prosecutions across the state and have prompted lawmakers to launch the process of amending the Iowa Constitution. The change would ultimately require voter approval.
Lindaman, now 75, was convicted after a jury trial in Polk County. Prosecutors alleged that on June 26, 2023, he committed a sex act in Ankeny against a child under the age of 10. A second count of sexual abuse was dismissed prior to trial. He was sentenced to 50 years in prison, with a mandatory minimum of 42½ years because of a prior sexual predatory offense in 1976. He also faced a separate and now-dismissed civil lawsuit from an Iowa woman who claimed he sexually assaulted her in 1975.
The Iowa Offender Search still lists Lindaman as in custody of the Iowa Medical & Classification Center.
On appeal, Lindaman argued that his constitutional rights were violated when the district court allowed the child to testify from another room via one-way closed-circuit television, rather than from the witness stand in the courtroom.
“Today’s decision from the Iowa Supreme Court is an important win for Lynn Lindaman and a major step toward a fair result,” said Lucas Taylor, the attorney representing Lindaman. “Although the court did not rule in our favor on every issue, this ruling recognizes serious errors in the prior proceedings and gives Mr. Lindaman the chance to present his defense to a new jury.”
In a 4-3 ruling issued earlier this year in State v. White, the Iowa Supreme Court agreed with that argument, holding that one-way video testimony violates the confrontation clause of the Iowa Constitution. Writing for the majority in that case, Justice David May said that “when the accused and the witness are prevented from seeing each other, there is no face-to-face confrontation, and the Iowa Constitution is not satisfied.”
The ruling came despite U.S. Supreme Court precedent allowing such testimony and laws in many other states permitting it. Under the Iowa statute the court overturned, judges had been allowed to authorize remote testimony by minors, or witnesses with mental illnesses or disabilities, if a judge found that “trauma caused by testifying in the physical presence of the defendant … would impair the minor’s ability to communicate.”
The White decision arose from an Osceola County case, but its effects have since spread and courts across Iowa have begun hearing challenges from defendants convicted in cases where one-way video testimony was used.
Following the ruling, Lynn Hicks, a spokesman for the Polk County Attorney’s Office, said at least five Polk County defendants convicted under similar circumstances could be entitled to new trials.
One of those defendants, Michael Dunbar, already has received a new trial. Dunbar was resentenced after the victim testified in person from the witness stand, and the court again imposed a life sentence.
Dissent fuels push to amend Iowa Constitution
The State v. White ruling has drawn sharp criticism from prosecutors and state leaders, including Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird, who has argued the decision unnecessarily traumatizes child victims.
Bird has proposed a constitutional amendment to allow children to testify remotely in certain cases. The measure has passed both chambers of the Legislature once and must pass again before going to voters in a statewide referendum.
“Children shouldn’t be forced to testify at arm’s length from their abusers, and many kids can’t. This opinion shows how important it is to restore protections for a child victim to testify remotely,” Bird said in a Tuesday statement to the Des Moines Register. “Our office will continue to fight for a constitutional amendment to ensure kids are protected and abusers are brought to justice. We are grateful our effort has received overwhelming bipartisan support in the Iowa Legislature.”
Justice Thomas D. Waterman, writing in a dissent in the opinion issued Tuesday, rejected the majority’s historical interpretation of the confrontation clause.
“Thunder comes during rainstorms; it does not follow that thunder requires rain. That video testimony was not used in 1871 tells us more about technology than it does about constitutional interpretation,” Waterman wrote.
He also said there is “no historical evidence that the framers of the Iowa Constitution intended a different meaning for confrontation rights than the Sixth Amendment,” and warned that the majority was reading requirements into Iowa’s Constitution that do not exist in its text.
Nick El Hajj is a reporter at the Register. He can be reached at nelhajj@gannett.com. Follow him on X at @nick_el_hajj.
This story was updated to add new information and to correct an inaccuracy.
Iowa
States including Iowa, Nebraska reach $150M settlement with Mercedes-Benz
LINCOLN, Neb. (WOWT) – A coalition of states including both Iowa and Nebraska reached a nearly $150 million settlement with Mercedes-Benz.
The states allege over 200,000 diesel vehicles were illegally equipped with devices designed to cheat on emissions tests between 2008 and 2016.
Mercedes allegedly hid the existence of these devices from regulators and people purchasing the vehicles.
Copyright 2025 WOWT. All rights reserved.
Iowa
See where Iowa State basketball ranks in the AP and coaches polls
Iowa State basketball is now ranked in the top three.
The Cyclone men improved to 13-0 this week after obliterating Long Beach State on Dec. 21 at Hilton Coliseum.
With the holiday week, Iowa State is off before returning for a home game Monday, Dec. 29, against Houston Christian at 7 p.m.
Here is a look at where the Cyclones stand in the latest college basketball rankings:
Iowa State rankings update
Iowa State moved up one spot to No. 3 in both the AP and Coaches Polls. The Cyclones were previously at No. 4.
USA TODAY Sports men’s college basketball coaches poll
Here is a look at the new USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll.
- Michigan
- Arizona
- Iowa State
- UConn
- Purdue
- Duke
- Gonzaga
- Houston
- Michigan State
- BYU
- Vanderbilt
- North Carolina
- Nebraska
- Louisville
- Alabama
- Texas Tech
- Kansas
- Arkansas
- Illinois
- Tennessee
- Virginia
- Florida
- Iowa
- Georgia
- USC
Others receiving votes
St. John’s 32; Kentucky 32; Seton Hall 20; Utah State 15; Auburn 10; California 9; UCLA 8; Saint Louis 8; LSU 6; Yale 4; Oklahoma State 3; Saint Mary’s 1; Indiana 1; Clemson 1;
AP Poll
Here is a look at the new Associated Press poll.
- Arizona
- Michigan
- Iowa State
- UConn
- Purdue
- Duke
- Gonzaga
- Houston
- Michigan State
- BYU
- Vanderbilt
- North Carolina
- Nebraska
- Alabama
- Texas Tech
- Louisville
- Kansas
- Arkansas
- Tennessee
- Illinois
- Virginia
- Florida
- Georgia
- USC
- Iowa
Others receiving votes
Kentucky 78, Seton Hall 49, Auburn 39, St. John’s 23, California 19, LSU 17, UCLA 13, Clemson 9, Miami (Ohio) 6, Utah St. 5, Arizona St 5, Indiana 4, Miami 4, Saint Louis 3, Belmont 2, Baylor 1, Oklahoma St. 1, UCF 1, NC State 1.
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