Last year's game, also played in primetime and
televised by ABC, drew an audience of 850,000.
Interest in the WNBA and attendance at games have exploded this
year, with the addition of a prominent rookie class, including
Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever and Angel Reese of the
Chicago Sky, being one of the reasons.
"This weekend's extraordinary viewership underscores women's
sports' exponential growth and ESPN is proud to showcase this
incredible league and its exceptional athletes on such a grand
stage," said Julie Sobieski, ESPN senior vice president of
league programming and acquisitions said, per The Athletic.
Sports Media Watch reported the All-Star Game was the
most-watched WNBA event since the opening week of play of the
league in June 1997. Viewership of the first game in league
history hit 5.04 million, with 3.59 million people tuning in the
following day.
The Athletic said the All-Star Game was the 17th WNBA game this
year with viewership of more than 1 million, with Clark
appearing in 15 of those games.
A WNBA game had not delivered more than 1 million viewers in the
past 16 years.
--Field Level Media [© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content. |
|