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Aliyah Boston vs. Caitlin Clark? Players ‘don’t buy into the narrative’

Aliyah Boston and South Carolina will face off against Caitlin Clark and Iowa in the Final Four. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Friday’s Final Four matchup between South Carolina and Iowa will feature two of the premier players in the country in Aliyah Boston and Caitlin Clark. But if you ask the stars themselves, they’re not focused on the narrative.

“It’s a team game. It’s never just gonna be one player,” Boston told reporters Thursday. “And so I don’t really buy into the narrative of ‘Aliyah vs. Caitlin.’ I just buy into Gamecocks vs. Hawkeyes.”

Of course, it’s hard not to want to let these two drive the narrative. Boston is last year’s consensus player of the year, while Clark has been winning the accolades this year.

All season long, questions have arisen about who is the better player: Is it Clark, Iowa’s high-powered offensive machine? Or Boston, South Carolina’s defensive-minded center, who can also score on any given night?

For Iowa coach Lisa Bluder, comparing the two players is like comparing “apples to oranges.”

“It makes no sense. They are completely different players. They are completely different positions. They’re both great at what they do, but what they do is different. So I don’t think you can compare the two of them,” she said. “They both contribute so much to their team’s success, but to me it’s not Caitlin vs. Aliyah. It’s Iowa vs. South Carolina, and we have to continue to remember that.”

On Friday, the matchup won’t be about who is the player of the year. It won’t be about tearing down other players to prop another up. It’ll be about the growth of the game as a whole, and about which team – Iowa or South Carolina – is advancing to Sunday’s national championship game.

As for her focus Friday, Clark echoed Boston’s sentiments.

“It’s going to be Iowa vs. South Carolina, and that’s who’s going to win the game. It’s not going to be one player who’s going to win the game,” she said. “I’m lucky enough to have four really good teammates on the court with me at the same time. I love playing a team sport. I don’t think I would like to play an individual sport.”

According to South Carolina coach Dawn Staley, everyone in the Gamecocks’ locker room wants a chance to guard Clark.

“It’s going to take all of them probably and more to guard Caitlin,” she said. “She is someone that is unpredictable, like she’ll be able to pivot and take and make incredible shots, both from outside, way outside the three, to at the rim. So we got to show her different looks in order for us to hopefully keep her somewhat under control.”

But while some might hone in on Clark as the difference-maker for the Hawkeyes in Friday night’s game, South Carolina players aren’t just focusing on the star.

“They have a whole starting five we have to worry about. I think if we get too focused on the main player, we’ll let others get off,” Gamecocks senior Zia Cooke said. “So Coach definitely emphasized on that, making sure that we’re playing everyone. Everyone that’s on the floor is doing their defensive job to stop their team from doing what they usually do.”

Top NWSL Matchups Take the Pitch in Post-Break Return

San Diego's Kenza Dali dribbles the ball up the pitch during a 2025 NWSL match.
San Diego will continue their NWSL turnaround against Kansas City. (Alex Menendez/NWSL via Getty Images)

The NWSL returns this weekend, bouncing back from April’s international break as teams who excelled early attempt to prove they belong on the top half of the table.

The fourth matchday of the 2025 NWSL season is loaded, as the league resets with pairings from all over the standings — leaving teams jockeying to shift or solidify their positions for the long season ahead.

Given that only five points currently separate first and eighth place, each match carries significant weight. Plus, with national team players returning on short rest after a busy international spin, expect squad rotation to play a major role in this weekend's results.

Seattle's Maddie Mercado passes the ball during a 2025 NWSL match.
A surging Seattle will battle the league-leading Orlando Pride on Saturday. (Meg Oliphant/NWSL via Getty Images)

Rising teams take aim at league-leaders

With the defending champion Orlando Pride riding last season's dominant play to a three-win 2025 start, a rising Seattle club faces a tough task this weekend.

The Reign, who finished second-to-last in 2024 play, already bounced back to claim sixth place on the table — but they'll still need significant home-pitch advantage to topple the league-leaders on Saturday.

This weekend's docket also features the NWSL's only other three-win squad, as the second-place KC Current hits the road to take on San Diego.

Like the Reign, the fifth-place Wave have put together a similar turnaround after missing last year's postseason cut. To keep that momentum, however, they'll have to combat 2024 NWSL MVP Temwa Chawinga’s high-flying attack on Saturday.

On the other end of the table, two clubs with high 2025 expectations enter this weekend still scrambling for a first season win, as the talent-laden Gotham FC and NC Courage will pit their robust rosters against each other in New Jersey on Sunday.

How to watch this weekend's top NWSL tilts

Saturday's biggest matches kick off with Orlando's visit to Seattle at 7:30 PM ET, with San Diego hosting Kansas City at 10 PM ET. Both games will air live on ION.

Then on Sunday, the Courage will battle Gotham at 4 PM ET, with live coverage on Paramount+.

‘The Late Sub’ Returns to Break Down Emma Hayes’s USWNT Strategy

Goalkeeper Phallon Tullis-Joyce prepares to kick the ball during the USWNT's 2025 friendly win over Brazil.
This week’s all-new episode of 'The Late Sub' discusses the USWNT’s April friendlies. (ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

Hit JWS podcast The Late Sub is back in action. We're kicking off a brand new season with staff writer Claire Watkins’s expert takes on the world of women’s soccer. And we're starting with the youth movement in the USWNT.

This week, Watkins talks through USWNT star Trinity Rodman’s splashy return. She later discusses the national team's current youth development movement. Lastly, she tackles head coach Emma Hayes's quest to find a successor for retired starting goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher. And all the while, she gives her own women's soccer analysis.

"McGlynn stresses me out sometimes. She’s a player with a high upside, and also sometimes she does have those mental moments," Watkins says of USWNT goalie prospect Mandy McGlynn.

"I like [Phallon] Tullis-Joyce, would love to see a lot more from her," the host said of another top goalie contender, currently rostered at Manchester United. "I think she deserves more call-ups."

About 'The Late Sub' with Claire Watkins

The Late Sub with Claire Watkins brings you the latest news and freshest takes on all things USWNT, NWSL, and all things women's soccer. Special guest appearances featuring the biggest names in women’s sports make TLS a must-listen for every soccer fan.

Follow Claire on X/Twitter @ScoutRipley and subscribe to the Just Women’s Sports newsletter for more.

Subscribe to The Late Sub to never miss an episode.

NWSL Commissioner Says League Could Rival NFL in Size

NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman speaks during the 2025 SheBelieves Summit.
NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman talked expansion at last week’s SheBelieves Summit. (Joe Scarnici/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman voiced confidence in the league's ability to execute "ambitious plans" regarding expansion at last week's SheBelieves Summit, telling the crowd that growing to as many as 32 teams is not out of the question.

"Our board believes that we can be the size of the [32-team] NFL," she explained. "There is nothing that stands in the way of us doing that, other than having access to top talent."

"There’s certainly not a problem with the supply, given the size of our country and the level of talent that exists," Berman continued. "We just need to figure out how to develop [those athletes] strategically and intentionally."

Boston mayor Michelle Wu and 2026 NWSL expansion team Boston Legacy FC's controlling owener Jennifer Epstein pose for a photo.
Boston and Denver remain the final expansion teams in the NWSL's current plans. (Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Expansion takes backseat as NWSL focuses on 2026 scheduling

With the NWSL's current 14-team field welcoming expansion clubs in Boston and Denver in 2026, the league is still a long ways off from its potential long-term goal of exceeding 30 squads.

Following her remarks at the SheBelieves Summit, Berman told ESPN that while the league is not currently in an expansion round, she is continuing to conduct conversations with interested ownership groups.

Prior to seriously considering continued expansion, however, the league must first contend with some scheduling hurdles affecting the 2026 NWSL season.

Berman noted that while the NWSL expects to play throughout next year’s US-based men’s World Cup, certain anticipated venue conflicts will require creative solutions to do so, with the commissioner noting that "everything’s on the table" when it comes to addressing the overlaps.

WNBA Star Kelsey Plum Drops 2025 Dawg Class Roster

WNBA star Kelsey Plum dribbles a basketball wearing Under Armour fashion.
Plum started the Under Armour 'Dawg Class' camp help NCAA athletes transition to the pros. (Under Armour)

Two-time WNBA champion Kelsey Plum dropped her 12-player 2025 Dawg Class roster on Wednesday, inviting another generation of college talent to join her at an Under Armour training camp designed to help NCAA athletes transition to the pros.

The new LA Sparks guard experienced her own growing pains in making the professional leap. In response, Plum launched the camp in 2023, aiming to specifically address those struggles and aid future pros.

Each year, Plum invites both graduating and returning NCAA stars to the training camp, hoping to help them overcome or even bypass some of the hurdles she encountered when entering the WNBA.

"Dawg Class is all about changing the game for the next generation of women's basketball players," explained Plum before the 2024 edition.

"All of these athletes have extraordinary talent and skill, and it is my mission to help them with that transition to the next level by cultivating that 'dawg' mentality — the grit, self-confidence and work ethic — to continue to succeed and evolve in their careers."

2025 Dawg Camp taps NCAA champions, star freshmen

Now entering its third iteration, newly crowned Final Four Most Outstanding Player Azzi Fudd and her UConn teammate and fellow 2025 NCAA champ KK Arnold are both making Dawg Class returns — Fudd took part in the 2023 edition while Arnold capped her freshman season at Plum's 2024 camp.

Also returning to the elite roster are 2024 alums Shyanne Sellers (Maryland) and Georgia Amoore (Kentucky), with Amoore having featured on all three Dawg Class rosters so far.

Both Amoore and Sellers, as well as first-time invitee and Harvard senior Harmoni Turner — the 2024/25 Beck Hammon Mid-Major Player of the Year — are turning pro this year, with the trio hoping to hear their names called during Monday's 2025 WNBA Draft.

Like Turner, eight other top college athletes are also making their Dawg Class debuts this year, including a quartet of the NCAA's most impressive freshmen: Michigan's Syla Swords, Ohio State's Jaloni Cambridge, USC's Kayleigh Heckel, and Vanderbilt's Mikayla Blakes.

Kelsey Plum's 2025 Under Armour Dawg Class

  • Georgia Amoore*, Kentucky
  • KK Arnold, UConn
  • Mikayla Blakes, Vanderbilt
  • Zoe Brooks, NC State
  • Jaloni Cambridge, Ohio State
  • Azzi Fudd, UConn
  • Kayleigh Heckel, USC
  • Ashlon Jackson, Duke
  • Tessa Johnson, South Carolina
  • Shyanne Sellers*, Maryland
  • Syla Swords, Michigan
  • Harmoni Turner*, Harvard

*denotes players who have declared for the 2025 WNBA Draft

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