Lindsay Gibbs Credit: Courtesy of Twitter

Breaking news: A new study says the womenโ€™s and menโ€™s NCAA Final Four media coverage was virtually equalย 

For several years, Power Playsโ€™ Lindsay Gibbs has studied mainstream womenโ€™s 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. 

Itโ€™s pretty simple, Gibbs explains: Count the number of stories published about womenโ€™s sports and tally the number of womenโ€™s college basketball and menโ€™s college basketball stories along with the number of womenโ€™s sports stories and menโ€™s 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 Bursteinโ€™s #CoveringtheCoverage data that she did for Power Plays of the 2021 Final Four. 

USA Todayโ€”21 WBB stories, 18 MBB storiesโ€”72 total sports stories. 

LA Timesโ€”8 WBB stories, 10 MBB storiesโ€”66 total sports stories.

Dallas Morning Newsโ€”8.5 WBB stories, 11 MBB storiesโ€”115 total sports stories.

Chicago Tribuneโ€”16 WBB stories, 18 MBB storiesโ€”95 total sports stories.

Washington Postโ€”21 WBB stories, 16.5 MBB storiesโ€”93 total sports stories.

NY Timesโ€”11 WBB stories, 13 MBB storiesโ€”52 total sports stories.

โ€œIn 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 womenโ€™s Final Four in 2021 compared to 21 percent to the menโ€™s. 

This year, she points out, โ€œThe coverage of the womenโ€™s Final Four increased by about 6% between 2021 and 2024.โ€  

In Gibbsโ€™ estimation, the six newspapersโ€™ womenโ€™s sports coverage is getting better, at least 11 percent better.  

โ€œThis isnโ€™t only a snapshot of media coverage,โ€ Gibbs told the MSR after her study was released on May 13, โ€œItโ€™s 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:

โ€”15 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 womenโ€™s stories outnumbered the menโ€™s; one day, there was only one WBB story; and one day where there was equal coverage (1 WNIT story and one NCAAM story). 

โ€œTwo papers have more womenโ€™s stories, four have more menโ€™s stories, but the gap isnโ€™t egregious in any individual instance,โ€ Gibs concluded.

โ€œMore coverage brings about more accountability and publicity. It is a crucial part of the growth of womenโ€™s sports.โ€

Charles Hallman is a contributing reporter and award-winning sports columnist at the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder.