Lisa Bluder is stepping away from Iowa women’s basketball after 24 seasons in Iowa City.

Bluder announced her retirement Monday in an open letter to Hawkeye Nation published on the team website.

“It is with a range of emotions that I share with you today that I have decided to step down from leading the Iowa women’s basketball team after 24 memorable years,” Bluder writes. “I informed President Wilson and Director of Athletics Beth Goetz of my decision and I am grateful for their unwavering support and offered them my assistance in any manner in the future.

“It has been the honor of my career to be a part of the Iowa Hawkeye family, and to lead a women’s basketball program filled with so many talented and remarkable young women, who have gone on to do great things in their careers and, more importantly, in their lives. There is no denying that this past season was incredible for so many reasons, and we could not have accomplished our achievements without all of you. After the season ended, I spent time with our student-athletes and coaches reviewing the season and preparing those moving on for what comes next. With that also came personal contemplation about what this journey has meant to me, how to best champion this program, and what the future looks like for my family and me. After then taking some time away with my husband, David, it became clear to me that I am ready to step aside.

“There is never an ideal time to retire and I am sure this fall that I will miss the games, the practices, the road trips, the atmosphere, the tremendous fans and, most importantly, the players. But my belief in the foundation of this program, knowing that success is now an unrelenting component of women’s basketball at the University of Iowa gives me comfort as I transition to become the program’s biggest champion.

“I want to thank each and every young woman who believed in our program and in our values for nearly a quarter of a century, and who proudly wore the Black & Gold.

“I want to thank Presidents Coleman, Skorton, Mason, Harreld and Wilson for their unequivocal support of our program and Directors of Athletics Dr. Christine Grant, Bob Bowlsby, Gary Barta and Beth Goetz for their unrelenting partnership.

“I want to thank my assistant coaches and operations and support staff who each played an integral role in our journey. I specifically want to acknowledge the work of Jan Jensen and Jenni Fitzgerald whom I have had the pleasure of working alongside for the past 32 years.

“I want to thank the incredible fans for believing in what we were doing and how we were doing it, creating the greatest home court advantage in all of women’s basketball.

“And finally, I want to thank David and our children, Hannah, Emma and David, Jr., for supporting me while I pursued my dreams and for their own sacrifices along the way.

“It is my hope that now with more time and energy, I can be an asset to our basketball program and this athletics department in any way that I am able.

“With Love and Gratitude,

Lisa”

Bluder retires after standout career

A Northern Iowa alumna born in Appleton, Wisconsin, Bluder has been in coaching for 40 years, getting her start at St. Ambrose in 1984. She took the Drake head coaching job in 1990 and became Iowa’s head coach in 2000.

Bluder, who turned 63 in April, has an 889-334 record as a head coach, including a 533-254 mark at Iowa, making her the Big Ten’s all-time winningest coach.

Under Bluder, Iowa won the B1G regular-season title in 2008 and ’22. The Hawkeyes won conference tournament championships in 2001, ’19, ’22, ’23 and ’24. Bluder was B1G Coach of the Year in 2001, ’08 and ’10. She won the Naismith College Coach of the Year in 2019.

New fans of Iowa women’s basketball were introduced to Bluder over the past couple of seasons as Caitlin Clark’s head coach. It was with Clark that the Hawkeyes reached the Final Four for the first time under Bluder in 2023, and again in ’24.