Maryland
The ‘Caitlin Clark Effect’ comes to College Park for Maryland women’s basketball vs. No. 3 Iowa
EVANSTON, Ill. — Maryland women’s basketball last sold out Xfinity Center in December 2016. On Saturday, the Terps are again expected to host a capacity crowd of 17,950 — but under very different circumstances.
The last sellout crowd saw fourth-ranked Maryland lose a nailbiter to top-ranked UConn in a battle of unbeaten teams. This time, the Terps won’t have a number next to their name — they sit at 12-9 overall, 4-6 in Big Ten play and are tied for eighth in the conference standings. But the environment will be no less electric because Maryland’s opponent, No. 3 Iowa (20-2, 9-1), is the biggest show in women’s basketball — if not all of college sports — thanks to star Caitlin Clark.
“[Clark is] a transcendent talent,” said Chuck Douglas, a Maryland alum and former NBA executive with the Washington Wizards. “She’s bigger than the game, and you can count on one hand how many players, men or women, that you could ever say that about.”
The greatness of Caitlin Clark
Clark, a senior guard, is leading the country in scoring at 32 points per game. Southern California’s JuJu Watkins, in second place, averages 25.8. The difference between Clark and Watkins (6.2) is the same as the difference between Watkins and the 28th highest scoring player on the list, LSU’s Angel Reese (19.6).
Clark just passed Kelsey Mitchell for the second-most career points in NCAA women’s basketball history, and she is on track to become the all-time leader in four games.
The Iowa star isn’t putting the ball in the hoop like other top scorers, though. Clark has taken 275 3-point shots this season, 88 more than second-place Dyaisha Fair of Syracuse — and many of those attempts have come from far behind the roughly 22-foot 3-point line.
“You have to guard her when she comes over half court,” Northwestern coach Joe McKeown said.
Clark has changed the dimensions of the court with her long-range shooting and her dynamic passing, which has her leading the nation in assists at 7.6 per game.
“Caitlin Clark is playing ‘Guitar Hero’ on level expert, and everyone else is playing it on level easy,” said Meghan McKeown, a Big Ten women’s basketball color commentator. “That’s how I would describe her passing.”
Her well-rounded offensive skill set forces opposing defenses into the ultimate lose-lose scenario; guard her too tightly and she’ll find her teammates. Play off of her, and she’ll score at will.
“You have to try something against her,” said Debbie Antonelli, a national women’s basketball analyst. “And I don’t think any of these strategies work against her, because she’s that good.”
The ‘Caitlin Clark Effect’
The expected sellout at Xfinity Center is nothing new. All seven of the Hawkeyes’ true road games have sold out, with opposing arenas seeing an average increase in attendance of over 150%.
“The women’s game is as popular as it’s ever been,” Douglas said. “[Clark is] part of the reason for that.”
Iowa’s game at Northwestern on Wednesday was perhaps the most striking example yet, as the Wildcats averaged a Big Ten-worst 1,671 fans per home game before the Iowa matchup. A crowd of 7,039 greeted Clark’s arrival, the vast majority of whom were decked out in Hawkeye gear.
At Northwestern, fans even bought season tickets for the sole purpose of attending the Iowa game — and it turned into a fantastic financial decision. Patience Vanderbush and Rosalie Dominik, Northwestern women’s basketball alums, bought two season tickets in a reserved section for $99 each. For the Iowa game, those seats were selling for a minimum of $600.
The Iowa-Maryland game will see a similar story. The cheapest tickets for the Terps’ four remaining home games outside of Iowa cost an average of $4. For the Iowa game, the cheapest tickets are $95, and some lower bowl tickets are selling for over $1,500.
Clark in College Park
But for all of Clark’s accomplishments, Saturday’s game presents one hurdle she hasn’t overcome: winning at Xfinity Center, where she is 0-2. Iowa hasn’t beaten Maryland in College Park since the Terps joined the Big Ten.
Maryland took down Iowa in Clark’s freshman year en route to their sixth Big Ten regular-season title in seven years. The Hawkeyes returned in February 2023, and the Terps again ran them out of the gym with a 96-68 shellacking, holding Clark to 5-for-13 shooting.
After that game, Iowa coach Lisa Bluder called the 9,065 fans “one of the smaller crowds that we’ve went against” and said they were not a factor in her team’s performance. Bluder’s comments stoked the fire of the rivalry between the perennial Big Ten powerhouses.
“They’ll probably heckle the crap out of [Clark] every time she touches the ball,” said Austin Boroshok, who runs “TerpTalk,” a popular Maryland women’s basketball fan account on X, formerly Twitter.
The Terps have lost six of nine games entering Saturday’s contest, but even those struggles can’t suck the life out of what has perhaps become the Big Ten’s best rivalry, as the two schools have combined to win the past five Big Ten Tournaments.
“I’m expecting it to be a pretty raucous crowd,” Boroshok said. “I don’t think it’s a secret that there’s not a lot of love lost between these two programs.”
Robbie Hodin and King Jemison are graduate students at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.
No. 3 Iowa at Maryland
Saturday, 8 p.m.
TV: Fox
Maryland
Open primaries advocates push D.C. and Maryland to expand voter access
Open primaries advocate Jeremy Gruber says nearly 100,000 independent voters in D.C. remain locked out of primary elections despite voters overwhelmingly approving open primaries in 2024. On The Final 5 with Jim Lokay, he blames the D.C. Council for refusing to fund the change and says similar efforts are gaining momentum in Maryland, where more than one million independents are also excluded from primaries. Gruber argues that in many one-party jurisdictions, the primary is effectively the election, making voter access even more critical.
Maryland
Federal Disaster Declaration Issued Following April Freeze: New Resources Available for Maryland Agricultural Producers – Washington County
This federal designation makes critical financial assistance available to agricultural producers who experienced significant crop losses due to the sudden freeze. The event caused extensive damage to perennial crops across Maryland, with losses exceeding the 30 percent threshold required for a federal disaster declaration. Many growers are now facing substantial expenses related to crop recovery, plant health, labor, and ongoing maintenance despite having little to no harvestable yield this season.
In addition to freeze-related impacts, many areas of the state continue to experience prolonged drought conditions, further increasing the financial challenges facing Maryland’s agricultural community.
As a result of the disaster declaration, producers in Washington County and 11 other designated primary counties, as well as eligible contiguous counties, may qualify for low-interest emergency loans and other assistance programs through the USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA). These resources are intended to help producers recover losses, maintain operations, and support the long-term viability of Maryland agriculture.
Affected producers are encouraged to contact their local USDA Farm Service Agency office as soon as possible to discuss available assistance programs and begin the application process.
The assessment of agricultural losses in additional Maryland counties remains ongoing. Additional information, resources, and updates are available through the Maryland Department of Agriculture.
Washington County remains committed to supporting our agricultural community and encourages producers impacted by the freeze event to explore the assistance programs available through this federal disaster declaration.
Click here to view Governor Wes Moore’s announcement.
Maryland
86 days since Moore’s team promised military records, investigation presses on
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (WBFF) — Gov. Wes Moore, who has anchored his political identity in a narrative of military service and the creed to “leave no one behind,” is facing mounting national pressure to provide a full accounting of his career after his office’s explanations failed to match available records.
The scrutiny — driven by a months-long investigation by veteran Army colonel and reporter Drew Sullins for the Spotlight on Maryland series in The Baltimore Sun — centers on a growing disconnect between Moore’s public storytelling and his official military documentation.
Spotlight on Maryland reporting by Drew Sullins, featured in The Baltimore Sun. (Steve Pierce/Spotlight on Maryland)
As Sullins continues to parse the governor’s record, Moore’s team has had to defend the authenticity of his biographical claims while grappling with requests from journalists to release his complete personnel file and be transparent with the Marylanders the governor is paid to serve.
Moore, who has refused to answer most of Spotlight’s questions, has instead provided interviews to a local news site and national outlets.
When asked last week during a CNN interview if he had provided a full accounting of his military history, Moore said he “never” mischaracterized his military career.
“I’m very proud of the service we did,” Moore said.
Spotlight’s reporting has largely focused on records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and interviews with military experts and veterans who served with Moore. Investigative stories have been published weekly since April and will continue for several more weeks.
RELATED | Analysis: Moore’s problem isn’t the media. It’s his record.
Sullins, who served for more than 30 years in uniform, said that understanding Moore’s records requires military experience and knowledge of the awards process.
To really understand Governor Moore’s military records, or any veteran’s military records, you need a certain level of expertise,” he said.
Sullins has led soldiers, held command and staff roles across multiple levels of the military and has investigated retroactive awards — like the Bronze Star Medal that Moore received in late 2024.
His deep dive into public records and fact-checking stemmed from the governor’s abrupt award of a Bronze Star decades after he had claimed he earned it, Sullins said.
WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 12: Wes Moore, governor of Maryland attends the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 53rd Annual Legislative Conference National Town Hall at Walter E. Washington Convention Center on September 12, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Leigh Vogel/Getty Images for Congressional Black Caucus Foundation)
FOX45 News first reported in 2022 that Moore had inaccurately claimed the military honor in his application for a White House Fellowship before his run for governor — something Moore initially denied and blasted as a smear campaign and later described as an “honest mistake.”
“We originally started out looking for anything related to the Bronze Star award in 2006 that he allegedly received in Afghanistan, or should have received and didn’t,” Sullins said.
The Bronze Star controversy resurfaced in 2024 after the New York Times reported on the issue.
ALSO READ | ‘They shouldn’t be’: Moore dodges question on poll concerns due to dishonesty, leadership
Moore said at the time that he included the award in a 2006 White House Fellowship application after being advised by a senior officer that it had been approved, though in an August 2024 press release, Moore acknowledged that he was disappointed to learn, before leaving Afghanistan, that he had not received the Bronze Star.
The medal was ultimately awarded to Moore in December 2024, nearly 18 years after his deployment.
Sullins said his analysis expanded beyond the medal to broader claims Moore has made about combat, training, leading soldiers and his time purportedly in harm’s way.
We wanted to validate all of that,” Sullins said. “So we were looking for any records that could basically support or validate any of those things.”
According to Sullins, Spotlight filed four separate FOIA requests with the Army. None, he said, has been fully completed. The Army has released about 41 pages of documents to Spotlight while withholding records in each request. Spotlight is considering litigation against the Army to force the release of some documents.
Moore’s office has separately released one record to Spotlight.
HAGERSTOWN, MARYLAND – MARCH 23: Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (C), accompanied by Rep. April McClain-Delaney (D-MD) (L) speaks to members of the media following a roundtable on March 23, 2026 in Hagerstown, Maryland. Moore and McClain-Delaney held a meeting with Washington County community leaders to discuss their concerns about a planned U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention warehouse near Williamsport, Maryland as part of the Trump administration’s expansion of holding facilities across the country. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
In March, Spotlight on Maryland pressed the governor at an unrelated event in Hagerstown to publicly release all records the newsroom had requested.
We continue to show transparency on everything and all things,” Moore said in March.
When asked why his office had released fewer records than other public figures who have faced scrutiny over their military records, Moore spokesman Ammar Moussa said the governor’s team was in “active negotiations” with Spotlight on Maryland over the records.
“We will come back to you with those records,” Moussa said.
Spotlight on Maryland does not negotiate for public records or for disclosure in the public interest. The dispute has since widened beyond the original reporting.
RELATED | As Wes Moore demands transparency, his own records remain hidden
In response to questions Monday about Moore’s recent military record disclosure to a small local online-only news outlet, the governor’s office did not answer the substance of Spotlight on Maryland’s questions, including whether Moore would release his records publicly. Instead, a spokesperson responded with multiple questions about David Smith, co-owner of The Baltimore Sun and the executive chairman of Sinclair, Inc., the parent company of FOX45 News.
Moore has repeatedly defended his record, saying he is proud of his service and the soldiers he served with.
But a central question of transparency remains unresolved. Why hasn’t the governor released his full military personnel file to the public?
Meanwhile, two veterans and GOP gubernatorial candidates, Ed Hale and John Myrick, have authorized the release of their full military records.
Sullins said full disclosure would end the dispute.
“It would put everything to rest,” he said. “There is a story, an untold story, and we don’t know all of the elements of that untold story because he will not be transparent and forthright.”
Do you have any tips or information related to this story? Send news tips to gmcollins@sbgtv.com or contact Spotlight on Maryland’s hotline at (410) 467-4670.
Follow Gary Collins on X and Instagram. Spotlight on Maryland is a collaboration between FOX45 News, WJLA in Washington, D.C., and The Baltimore Sun.
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