COLLEGE L FE SPORTS A New Outburst of Hoopla 6 Purists are flocking to women's basketball, but students are not For decades Iowans young and old have flocked to high-school gyms and big-city arenas to scream their excitement about girls' basketball. But the enthusiasm of the fans and the opportunities for the players seldom extended beyond high-school level. Sel- dom, at least, until C. Vivian Stringer ar- rived five years ago to coach Iowa's Hawk- eyes. Promising someday to fill Iowa's 15,600-seat Carver-Hawkeye Arena for a women's game, to win a Big Ten champion- ship and, ultimately, a national champion- ship, she drew mostly skeptical snickers. Nobody's laughing now. Three years ago Iowa drew 22,157 into Carver-Hawkeye Arena to watch the Hawkeyes play Ohio State. Last year the Hawks tied the Buck- eyes for the conference championship. Only one more promise remains to be kept, and Stringer's Hawkeyes have a strong shot at the NCAA title; they rolled un- beaten through much of the season, ranked No. 1 in the polls. The Hawks may soon confirm the vision Stringer once described to her squad: "Someday it will happen that when people talk about women's basket- ball, they will talk about Iowa." That statement says as much about the recent popularity of women's basketball as it does about the Hawkeyes. A few years ago only a few strongholds existed at the college level-Mississippi's Delta State, Louisiana Tech and Virginia's Old Domin- ion, for example. Most sports fans consid- ered the sport little more than an inferior imitation of the men's version, played by athletes who ran too slowly, passed too much and couldn't jump high enough to slam-dunk. Once lured into the women's arena, however, basketball fans have dis- covered something quite unexpected: the women are fast and athletic and, some say, actually more fun to watch than the men. The evidence is nationwide. At Texas, the Lady Longhorns not only outdraw the men's team by 5,000 fans a game, they often outdraw every men's team in the entire Southwestern Conference. The Lady Knights of Rutgers have doubled attend- ance in two seasons, and their average of nearly 3,000 fans a game almost matches that of the men's team. And last December at Tennessee, a game was delayed while I 0 0 S 6 0 SUSAN ALLEN CAMP No one's snickering: Behind-the-back pass during Texas-Texas Christian game 18 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUSA APRIL 1988