Nancy Abram, a long-time marketing professor at Iowa’s Tippie College of Business, had Clark two years ago as a sophomore in her Introduction to Marketing Strategies class. Abram said when the university’s athletic department submitted the list of student-athletes enrolled in the class, Clark’s name immediately stood out. That’s even considering Abram’s course of more than 200 students always includes players from Iowa’s football, men’s basketball, softball and baseball teams.
“I was like ‘Wow, Caitlin Clark is in my class’,” Abram recalled in an interview with Volt. “Her fame came really quick here.”
As Clark’s profile continued to grow, so did attendance at her games and, in turn, revenue for the athletic department. Notorious for empty stands and being a money drain at most universities, women’s basketball at Iowa last season doubled the sport’s previous record for annual revenue — from $1.9 million to more than $3.8 million — and stands to turn a profit for the first time in 2023-24 if revenue can exceed its estimated $8.5 million operating budget.
Attendance reached record highs this season with average home turnout likely to exceed 13,000 (up from record tallies of just over 11,000 per game last year), according to a university spokesman. An AP report found Clark’s impact contributed to spectator attendance growing by 150% at Iowa’s away arenas.
Eighteen of Iowa women’s basketball’s 20 all-time sellout crowds at its home Carver-Hawkeye Arena have taken place during Clark’s time at the university, according to the school’s athletic department. Iowa also became the first Big 10 team to endow its women’s basketball head coaching position, during Clark’s sophomore season.
“All of that combined has just really transformed the program and turned Iowa into a truly national brand,” Abram said.
Beyond that, the number of prospective student applications and alumni donations at the university has grown. According to school data, Iowa welcomed its fourth-largest freshman class in its history, with 5,064 students this past fall, and enjoyed its largest number of applicants since before the pandemic. University spokesman Steve Schmadeke said in an email that Iowa also is seeing a record level of admission applications from prospective students for Fall 2024, though final tallies won’t be available until the end of the summer.
Alumni donations in 2022, the most recent year available, hit $438 million, dwarfing the previous annual donation record of $266 million.
Coincidence? Or a result of “Clark Mania?” Although athletic revenue and attendance are “undoubtedly” related to Clark’s stardom, according to Abram, neither she nor Schmadeke would commit to quantifying Clark’s impact on donations and applications.
What’s certain, though, is the legendary player’s significant role in promoting the Iowa brand to young women.
“She’s a hero for young girls that are 8, 9, 10 years old right now, and she’s going to live in their hearts and minds for many years,” Abram said. “I always say brands aren’t made by the companies. Brands live in the hearts and minds of the people that consume them. That’s something that will last a pretty long time, especially for people she’s making an impression on during their younger years.”