March Madness will pay women’s teams under a new structure approved by the NCAA
Posted/updated on: January 16, 2025 at 7:06 amNASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) â Women’s basketball teams finally will be paid for playing games in the NCAA Tournament each March just like the men have for years under a plan approved Wednesday at the NCAA convention.
The unanimous vote by NCAA membership was met by a round of applause both inside the ballroom and around the sport. This was the final step toward a pay structure for women playing in March Madness after the Division I Board of Governors voted unanimously for the proposal in August.
NCAA President Charlie Baker joined others in giving credit for the creation of a performance fund to those who came before and helped build women’s basketball.
Now comes more work and continued investment to grow women’s basketball even more.
“Thatâs the part I hope, that someday down the road, we all will have someone say about us that they sit on the shoulders of the work that we did,â Baker said.
South Carolina coach Dawn Staley, whose Gamecocks went undefeated winning last year’s national championship and her third overall, said her first thought hearing of the vote was a simple âYES!â
âThis continues our fight to lift womenâs basketball to historic levels,â Staley said. “I appreciate the decision by the Kaplan Hecker and Fink law firm to include the lack of units in their report as a key issue holding womenâs basketball back from capitalizing on the historic viewership and quality of the product on the court.â
So-called performance units, which represent revenue, will be given to women’s teams playing in the tournament starting this year, the event’s 43rd edition. A team that reaches the Final Four could bring its conference roughly $1.26 million over the next three years in financial performance rewards.
In the first year, $15 million will be awarded to teams out of the fund, which is 26% of the womenâs basketball media revenue deal. That will grow to $25 million, or 41% of the revenue, by 2028. The 26% is on par with what menâs basketball teams received the first year the performance units program was established.
Teams making this Marchâs NCAA Tournament wonât actually be paid until the organization has a full tournament of data available.
Still, North Carolina coach Courtney Banghart, also is president of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association, called postseason units a reward for the investment by athletic departments in women’s basketball.
âThe long awaited, hard fought for and well-earned day is here,â Banghart said. âI am so grateful for the effort of so many to bring this reality to our sport. Womenâs basketball is more popular than ever before, seats are filled, arenas are sold out, and games are on national TV almost every night.â
UConn guard Paige Bueckers agreed that this is a huge step toward helping this sport grow.
âJust for women to capitalize on what we brought to the sport and what we do for just sports in general and entertainment and just to be able to be a part of that, weâre extremely grateful,” Bueckers said.
The proposal was broken into two votes on Wednesday, with the first on the payments being earned starting with the next NCAA Tournament. That received one ânoâ vote, though the vote to establish the womenâs fund itself got a âyesâ from all 292 members voting.
The womenâs March Madness plan is similar to the menâs basketball unit program. Each of 32 conferences with an automatic bid receive a unit, and additional units will be rewarded for teams receiving at-large bids to the 68-team field.
The longer a schoolâs tournament run lasts, the more units the schoolâs conference receives. Conferences decide the distribution of unit revenue to each of its members. Each unit was worth about $2 million for the 2024 menâs tournament.
Menâs basketball teams now receive 24% of the media rights deal, which is $8.8 billion over eight years, starting this year. Womenâs basketball is valued at $65 million per tournament in the NCAAâs new media rights deal with ESPN â roughly 10 times more than in the contract that ends this year.
The women have a higher percentage of the media revenue deal to bolster the value of each performance unit.
The NCAA sharing March Madness revenue with its member schools has long been a feature of the menâs tournament. The 2018 tournament, for example, brought in $844.3 million in television and marketing rights, the vast majority from a contract with CBS and Turner Sports to televise the games.
Most of the money flows through the NCAA to conferences and then back to member schools, more than 300 of which field Division I basketball teams eligible to play in the tournament. The schools mostly reinvest in athletics, from scholarships for athletes in all sports to coaching salaries, training facilities, stadiums, ballparks and arenas.
Julie Roe Lach, commissioner of the Horizon League and a member of the Division I women’s basketball oversight committee, called the creation of the fund a âhuge stepâ not just for women’s basketball but women’s sports in general toward the goal of gender equity. Lach said they can’t simply celebrate this moment, not with women’s college basketball âskyrocketing in popularity.”
“The womenâs basketball funds are unrestricted, meaning conferences and institutions can choose how we want to invest these extra dollars,â said Lach, who noted the Horizon League has policies ready to reward programs for strong schedules, performance and postseason success.
UConn coach Geno Auriemma, with his 11 national titles, said Wednesday night this capitalizes on the money coming from broadcast rights and other corporate investments. The Big East had been investing and sharing revenue since the league had 16 teams, knowing that NCAA money for men’s teams meant big chunks of revenue for small athletic departments. Auriemma said this gives women’s teams the chance to earn money for their schools now as well.
âI donât think you could ever say you can be totally self supportive,â Auriemma said. “I donât think anybody thinks that, but itâs a statement that they made today about where womenâs basketball fits into the big picture of college athletics.â
The womenâs tournament is coming off its most successful year ever, which included a record audience of 18.7 million for the title game won by South Carolina over Iowa and Caitlin Clark, the highest for a basketball broadcast of any kind in five years.
It outdrew the menâs championship game â UConn winning its second consecutive title with a victory over Purdue â by nearly 3 million viewers. The womenâs tournament also had record attendance.
NCAA notes
In another milestone, the Division I approved a championship for womenâs wrestling. Divisions II and III will vote on adding it in the coming days. … SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said any changes to the College Football Playoff would need unanimous approval. The change most likely to be considered right away would be a shift in the seeding. The top four seeds in this yearâs tournament all received byes and all lost their first games. … Discussions about new rules that would give athletes five years to complete five years of eligibility continue. DI council chair Josh Whitman, the AD at Illinois, said âone of the attractive elements of, whether itâs a 5-for-5, or whatever it may end up being, is maybe we can create something thatâs simpler, itâs cleaner, itâs easier to understand.â
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AP Basketball Writer Doug Feinberg in Miami, AP National Writer Eddie Pells in Nashville and AP Freelance Writer Larry Fleisher in New York contributed to this report.
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