From Caitlin Clark and Simone Biles
to a new hockey league, women's sports had a pivotal year
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[December 18, 2024]
By ALANIS THAMES
Record numbers of basketball fans filled arenas to watch the rookie
seasons of Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese unfold. Simone Biles
captivated the world at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Coco Gauff made
women's tennis history.
It was all part of a pivotal year for women in sports, financially
and culturally, and after a steady rise in popularity and reach in
recent years, the women's game is more valuable than ever.
“(Clark)'s just moved the needle of the global movement of women in
sports,” said softball great and Olympic gold medalist Jennie Finch,
“and what a thrill it’s been to be able to see her rise.”
The consulting firm Deloitte estimated in November 2023 that women's
sports would generate more than $1 billion in global revenue this
year for the first time ever, which the company said is up about
300% from its last estimate in 2021. Skyrocketing viewership and
corporate sponsorships were major factors.
The WNBA in July signed a historic 11-year media rights deal with
Disney, Amazon Prime and NBC valued at about $200 million — a jump
from about $60 million currently. Players hope higher salaries and a
greater share of revenue could be on the horizon as parity, star
power and competition in the WNBA continue to grow.
The WNBA had its most-watched regular season in 24 years and best
attendance in 22 seasons, and commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a
recent state-of-the-league address that players are getting a lot
more marketing deals, turning them into household names. That
includes Las Vegas star A’ja Wilson, who had one of the most
dominant seasons in WNBA history, and Clark, who set numerous rookie
records.
The decisive Game 5 of the WNBA finals between the New York Liberty
and the Minnesota Lynx drew an average of 2.2 million viewers,
peaking at 3.3 million, which made it the most-watched WNBA game in
25 years.
“We’ve been growing in popularity, endorsements, media rights, all
of those things,” said Amira Rose Davis, a sports historian and
assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
“This period is one of rapid acceleration,” Davis continued, "where
all that growth seems to switch into overdrive, where the deals are
getting bigger, where the visibility is stretching out.”
Clark, the sharp-shooting Indiana guard became a phenomenon when she
played at Iowa, capitalized on a foundation laid by hoops stars such
as Diana Taurasi, Candace Parker and Wilson, and turbocharged the
visibility of women's basketball.
Ticket sales to Indiana Fever games were up 182% in 2024 from the
previous season. The Fever also shattered the attendance record of
13,398 set by the Liberty in 1998 with around 16,084 tickets sold
per game. And games featuring Clark and her on-court rival Reese of
the Chicago Sky prompted social media debates about basketball, race
and culture.
“Something that I always tried to do with me was rise and elevate
the game,” said Finch, now an adviser for the Athletes Unlimited
Softball League. "And that’s what (Clark)'s doing and her teammates.
And just to be able to watch her do it and how humbly she does it,
and the impact of not only domestic women’s basketball, but women’s
athletics globally. It’s a dream.”
While many point to the WNBA as a blueprint for success in women's
sports, accomplishments in 2024 went far beyond one league or
athlete.
Gauff, the 20-year-old tennis superstar, was the world's
highest-paid female athlete this year with $30.4 million in
earnings, according to Sportico rankings. Gauff could not defend her
2023 U.S. Open title, but ended her 2024 season with a WTA finals
title and a $4.8 million check — the biggest payout ever for a
women's tennis event, per Sportico.
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Simone Biles, of the United States, celebrates after winning the
gold medal at the medal ceremony during the women's artistic
gymnastics individual vault finals at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer
Olympics, Saturday, Aug. 3, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP
Photo/Francisco Seco, File)
The Olympics neared complete gender parity for the
first time among the more than 11,000 men and women who competed in
Paris this summer.
More than 34 million people across all NBC platforms in the U.S.
watched Biles exorcise the demons of her surprising exit from the
Tokyo games three years earlier. The 27-year-old shared a message of
resilience and redemption as she added four gold medals to her
resume. Nearly everything she did in Paris made headlines — a clap
back at social media trolls, a revelation about her mental health, a
moment of triumph. Her TikTok showing Team USA’s gold medals from
team competition has more than 139 million views.
“She became a symbol,” Davis said. "Whether you wanted to symbolize
her as persevering, or talking about mental health or refusal, the
politics of refusal. Or (whether) you wanted to symbolize her as
being a quitter — being everything that you’re bemoaning about the
country. Either way, both projections elevated her even more.”
And as Gauff and Biles soared, other women’s leagues leveraged that
visibility.
The Pro Women's Hockey League brought in 392,259 fans during its
inaugural regular season, highlighted by a women’s hockey record
crowd of 21,105 at the home arena of the NHL's Canadiens for a
Montreal-Toronto matchup. The league also reached sponsorship deals
with Scotiabank, Air Canada and Hyundai.
The PWHL's strong first season showed its organizers and players
that there's an appetite for women's sports, so much so that there
are hopes to expand from six to eight teams in 2025.
“For many of us that have been in the game for so long, it’s
emotional to think about where the game's come from, where we’ve
come to,” said Jayna Hefford, the league’s senior vice president of
hockey operations. “We spend a lot of time reading research and all
these things that suggest the time is now and that the fandom is
there. And to be able to live that and feel it in real time was
pretty special.”
Keith Stein and Justine Siegal want to capitalize on the women's
sports landscape too.
Siegal, a former baseball player and coach, partnered with Stein, a
lawyer and businessman, to create the Women's Pro Baseball League,
which last month announced plans to launch in 2026 as a six-team
circuit for female players. It will be the first pro league for
women since the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
dissolved in 1954.
“Leagues like the WNBA and (National) Women’s Soccer League have
done a lot of the heavy lifting," Stein said, "and they’re part
responsible for the moment we’re having right now where women’s
sport is a phenomenon.
"I think there’s, in some ways, a lot more momentum behind the
development of professional women’s sports leagues than for men’s.”
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AP Sports Writers John Wawrow and Cliff Brunt contributed.
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