South Carolina finished the season the same way they started: undefeated.
The Gamecocks beat Iowa 87-75 on Sunday to finish 38-0, becoming the first team to win a national title without dropping a game since 2016.
It came a year after Iowa ended South Carolina’s bid for an undefeated season in the Final Four.
"We're unbeatable," junior Bree Hall said. "That's the statement that was made tonight."
"We've come a long way," Te-Hina Paopao said. "It's been a long journey. We've trusted each other so much over the season. We have so much confidence with each other, so much love. ... We genuinely love to be with each other. We genuinely want to see everyone succeed. It's been a great journey and to cap it off with a perfect season, it's just a blessing."
Sophomore Raven Johnson, who was waved off by Clark from behind the arc in the 2023 semifinal game, held Clark to 3-11 with four turnovers after she had 18 points in the first quarter. She had just 12 points in the game’s final 30 minutes.
"It doesn't always end like you want it to end, much like last year," Staley said. "But my [seniors from last season] are at the top of my heart because they wanted this. And I hope we can erase whatever pain they had, last year experiencing not being able to finish it here.
"It's awesome. It's unbelievable."
South Carolina’s bench was the differentiator, outscoring Iowa’s bench 37-0 on the night. Key in that was freshman Tessa Johnson, who had 19 points in just 25 minutes of playing time. She joined former Gamecock Destanni Henderson as the sole players to have career highs in the national championship game in the last 25 seasons.
"They've done so much for this team," Paopao said of the bench. "A lot of people sleep on them. But they could start on any team in this country, but they decided to sacrifice that and play for this team and win a national championship, which we did today."
The Gamecocks out-rebounded Iowa 51-29, including 18 on the offensive glass due in part to Kamilla Cardoso, who had 15 points and 17 rebounds. She earned Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four for her efforts, becoming just the fifth player with at least 15 points and 15 rebounds in a championship game in the past 25 seasons.
"Kamilla Cardoso was not going to let us lose a game in the NCAA tournament," Staley said. "She played through an injury, she played like one of the top picks in the WNBA draft and her teammates did something that no teammates have done for anybody who went to the WNBA in our program. They sent her off as a national champion. So this is history for us."