I used to be within the seventh grade the primary time sports activities writing gave me a visceral feeling. UConn capped a 39-0 season to win its third nationwide title in eight years, and I anxiously awaited the supply of Sports activities Illustrated.
When it arrived, Maryland’s Juan Dixon graced the duvet, however throughout the April 8, 2002, version of the journal’s high, it learn: “UConn’s AMAZING WOMEN, Pg. 44.”
I instantly flipped previous “Faces within the Crowd,” the place you might reliably see feminine athletes within the journal in 2002, and tore by the characteristic that detailed the lives of UConn’s close-knit seniors: Sue Fowl, Swin Money, Asjha Jones and Tamika Williams. How they lived collectively off campus. Cooked weekly household dinners. Fought over card video games and guess about who can be the primary to cry on senior evening. … I ate it up.
These particulars stayed with me years later, as a result of as a girls’s school basketball fan within the Nineties and 2000s, there wasn’t a lot on the market to eat about essentially the most thrilling groups and gamers. You hardly ever forgot something. Information simply existed in your mind (generally for the following 20 years).
After rereading the UConn story, I turned to the again web page to take a look at the column I all the time learn — “Lifetime of Reilly.”
The headline? “Out of Contact with My Female Aspect.”
“You suppose it’s laborious teaching within the Ultimate 4? You suppose it’s powerful dealing with 280-pound seniors, freshmen with brokers, athletic administrators with pockets filled with pink slips?” columnist Rick Reilly started. “Please. Attempt teaching seventh-grade women. After working with boys for 11 years, I helped coach my daughter Rae’s college basketball staff this winter. I realized one thing about seventh-grade women: They’re normally within the lavatory.”
These few pages about UConn’s intense, elite girls had been sandwiched by a three-word headline on the duvet and 800 phrases higher fitted to dangerous motion pictures or lazy literature on the again web page. It was disappointing and irritating. Worst of all, even to my seventh-grade self, it was anticipated.
For a lot of sports activities historical past, girls athletes (and their followers) have needed to settle for the highs with the lows and transfer ahead, understanding that too typically the lows had been intentional — an absence of funding, institutional help or consideration. Later, these lows had been synthetic causes to proceed holding down and holding again the game. It’s the ladies’s sports activities Catch-22.
The “Caitlin Clark Impact” poured over into the WNBA this summer time, and groups throughout the league — not simply the Fever — drew report crowds and large TV rankings. As the ladies’s school season started this week, even with out the celebrities that pushed girls’s school hoops to new ranges, curiosity stays.
GO DEEPER
Paige Bueckers vs. JuJu Watkins: How UConn, USC stars will maintain girls’s basketball in highlight
Defending champion South Carolina bought out its season ticket packages for the primary time in program historical past. UConn bought out its season tickets for the primary time since 2004. LSU and Iowa, with out Angel Reese and Clark, respectively, bought out. Texas, Notre Dame and Tennessee are additionally reporting big will increase.
5 months earlier than the nationwide title recreation, tickets are bought out for the Ultimate 4, and the resale market is buzzing. Nosebleeds for the nationwide championship recreation are practically $200, whereas a courtside seat will run near $3,000.
For the primary time since 2004-05, our Gampel Pavilion season tickets are SOLD OUT!
Restricted season tickets stay for XL Heart video games ➡️ https://t.co/SLhPATBr4S pic.twitter.com/QGyhYGh81F
— UConn Ladies’s Basketball (@UConnWBB) October 2, 2024
No one in girls’s hoops has received like Daybreak Staley — Ultimate Fours as a participant, nationwide titles as a coach, Olympic golds as a participant, Olympic gold as a coach. Her South Carolina workplace drips with memorabilia. But, amongst all of her particular accomplishments, this explicit second in girls’s school basketball feels uniquely completely different to her. “It looks like we’re free to simply discover the place this recreation can go,” she stated. “There’s no boundaries on us, and due to that, you’re seeing expertise, you’re seeing teaching, you’re seeing fan help, you’re seeing viewership — you’re seeing all of these issues.”
Staley speaks typically and overtly about how the ladies’s recreation was deliberately held again by so many for therefore lengthy. First, by the exclusion of girls in sports activities earlier than Title IX. Then, by the NCAA, which prioritized males’s school basketball. Additionally, by tv media companions, which refused to place the sport in entrance of as many as attainable (after which used that lack of viewers as a purpose to not air it on main networks), and in print media protection, which refused to jot down about girls’s sports activities (after which typically claimed nobody examine it).
Then got here final season. A yr wherein the ladies’s nationwide title recreation pulled in practically 4 million extra viewers than the lads’s title recreation, simply three years after the Kaplan Report uncovered the NCAA’s intentional undervaluing of the sport and permitting its media companions to underpay.
“This,” Staley stated, with a pause, motioning together with her arms to point all the pieces over the previous yr. “I by no means thought it will come throughout a time once I might be part of it.”
Anybody who has been round girls’s basketball will share guarded optimism in addition to pleasure for this season. Will this lastly be the tipping level? Will the forces that held again the sport completely transfer out of the way in which?
Tara VanDerveer has seen all of it, together with what she thought was the turning level. Twenty-two thousand folks confirmed up for Iowa vs. Ohio State in 1985, her first season in Columbus. But it surely turned out to be an outlier. All through her profession, which started together with her driving the staff bus and doing the laundry as an assistant coach and ended final season at Stanford with three title rings and 1,216 profession wins, she skilled these begins and stops, occasions when a second might’ve changed into momentum if it had funding, help and pleasure.
“We would have liked to construct on that, not have or not it’s a one-off,” VanDerveer stated. “Protecting our eye on the ball, protecting having the sport develop. Extra younger women taking part in. Nice highschool tournaments, enthusiasm for the faculty recreation. Folks being excited concerning the WNBA.”
VanDerveer says as we speak looks like that.
Clark pushed the sport to new heights final season. This yr, USC’s JuJu Watkins, UConn’s Paige Bueckers and the Gamecocks — on a 39-game profitable streak — are poised to proceed the momentum. NIL has fully modified how girls’s basketball gamers are marketed (and given them energy), bringing in new followers. The switch portal opened participant motion and democratized the sport’s rising parity. Go searching and also you’ll see as many as 10 groups that look able to heading to the Ultimate 4. Gone are the times when a UConn or Tennessee might win a lot they had been blamed as being dangerous for the game.
Lower than every week into the season, we’ve already seen top-five groups pushed to the brink. The gifted stars in girls’s hoops? They draw. However the parity, which has by no means been higher, and true perception that on any given evening, something might occur? That’s riveting.
What we’re seeing is lengthy overdue, and it nonetheless feels prefer it’s simply getting began.
For many years, girls’s school hoops deserved higher than taking part in second fiddle within the NCAA’s orbit. It wanted to be untethered in order that the moments might match collectively into one thing larger and higher. It was worthy of greater than three phrases on the entrance cowl and a patronizing column on the again web page. It deserved the total unfold. So please, decision-makers and stakeholders, don’t mess this up.
There’s a brand new era of seventh-graders watching.
(Picture of Daybreak Staley: Sean Rayford / Getty Photos)