
Breaking news: A new study says the womenโs and menโs NCAA Final Four media coverage was virtually equalย
For several years, Power Playsโ Lindsay Gibbs has studied mainstream womenโs basketball coverage, tracking six newspapers: USA Today, Los Angeles Times, Dallas Morning News, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, and the New York Times. Gibbs monitored these daily publications for at least a week.
Itโs pretty simple, Gibbs explains: Count the number of stories published about womenโs sports and tally the number of womenโs college basketball and menโs college basketball stories along with the number of womenโs sports stories and menโs sports stories in general.
This year, Gibbs, a veteran freelance sports reporter and podcaster, studied the period from April 3 to April 10 and compared it with Tori Bursteinโs #CoveringtheCoverage data that she did for Power Plays of the 2021 Final Four.
USA Todayโ21 WBB stories, 18 MBB storiesโ72 total sports stories.
LA Timesโ8 WBB stories, 10 MBB storiesโ66 total sports stories.
Dallas Morning Newsโ8.5 WBB stories, 11 MBB storiesโ115 total sports stories.
Chicago Tribuneโ16 WBB stories, 18 MBB storiesโ95 total sports stories.
Washington Postโ21 WBB stories, 16.5 MBB storiesโ93 total sports stories.
NY Timesโ11 WBB stories, 13 MBB storiesโ52 total sports stories.
โIn 2021, we only monitored six days of coverage, while this year I monitor eight days,โ Gibbs wrote, adding that only 11 percent of the six papers devoted their coverage to the womenโs Final Four in 2021 compared to 21 percent to the menโs.
This year, she points out, โThe coverage of the womenโs Final Four increased by about 6% between 2021 and 2024.โ
In Gibbsโ estimation, the six newspapersโ womenโs sports coverage is getting better, at least 11 percent better.
โThis isnโt only a snapshot of media coverage,โ Gibbs told the MSR after her study was released on May 13, โItโs exciting to be able to see the quality in print and to be able to directly compare the progress with 2021.โ
As a result, we also looked at the local media coverage by gender, particularly the Star Tribune. The MSR found the following:
โ15 WBB stories, 9 MBB stories, one WBB/MBB combined story, and four WNIT stories (the Gophers reached the finals this season) for a total of 29 basketball-related stories.
As Gibbs discovered in her study, we also found at least two days where the womenโs stories outnumbered the menโs; one day, there was only one WBB story; and one day where there was equal coverage (1 WNIT story and one NCAAM story).
โTwo papers have more womenโs stories, four have more menโs stories, but the gap isnโt egregious in any individual instance,โ Gibs concluded.
โMore coverage brings about more accountability and publicity. It is a crucial part of the growth of womenโs sports.โ
