Adding games on linear television and better promotion of women’s lacrosse will draw more fans to the sport, but both men’s and women’s lacrosse have a long way to go if they want to secure the best windows.
This year’s men’s final between Virginia and Maryland averaged 399,000 viewers on ESPN2, the most viewed lacrosse championship game since 2017. The women’s final between Boston College and Syracuse averaged 89,000 viewers on ESPNU, the fifth most-viewed college women’s lacrosse game on an ESPN network.
That pales in comparison to the NCAA Division I softball championship game, which averaged 1.57 million viewers on ESPN, even though it was played on a Thursday afternoon after weather delays had extended the event. The previous two nights’ softball primetime games averaged 1.86 and 2.08 million viewers.
In recent years, women athletes have fostered their own followings organically on social media, and that interest could compel networks to broadcast more, Darvin said.
“The media plays a huge role in how interested folks are in viewing and becoming fans of women’s events,” she said. “Some of these stereotypes and misconceptions really impact that. Folks think A) women and girls aren’t interested in sports altogether; and B) that they’re not interested in viewing women’s sporting events because they’re not going to be that exciting. But once they’re exposed, from my studies, people are almost twice as likely to seek out an event in the future.”
Christy Leach, the outgoing NCAA Division I Women’s Lacrosse Committee chair, said she is determined to get the women’s quarterfinals on linear television in 2022. It’s been discussed in talks with ESPN after this year’s tournament. Accommodating first- and second-round games in the same fashion could prove more difficult. The 26-team women’s tournament is larger than the 16-team men’s field, necessitating more games to schedule in tighter windows.
“Yes, we want to be on TV, but what do we want to sacrifice for it?” Leach said. “We don’t want to sacrifice playing on the weekend or something like that. We talk through different scenarios of what we think can be best moving forward. The second round, we made that time block a little bigger too, because there are eight games that day. We worked on spacing them out a bit or depending on the time zone they’re in so we can give the student-athletes a great experience as well as pushing our game to get on a linear network.”
“Going to the NCAA tournament is a big deal,” Leach added. “Having that championship feeling is something we have to continue to look at.”
To get the quarterfinals on linear television, the women will need four broadcast slots. And they will have to find them in a popular college championship time that has been dominated by softball.
“It’s a challenge,” Margulis said. “You look at where they are versus what’s already there, it’s tough. To do that, we’ll have to be creative and make some decisions and see what we can do. It’s a great goal to have. But you only have so many linear networks and they’re all pretty jammed with college programming that weekend.”
Increased coverage is a part of continued efforts to grow the game. Women’s lacrosse this year announced the addition of NCAA Division I programs at Fairleigh Dickinson, Xavier and Clemson — all of which will begin play in 2023. Eastern Michigan and Pittsburgh start next year. There are 121 Division I women’s lacrosse programs and 74 Division I men’s lacrosse programs.
Robertshaw said advocates of the women’s game need to set concrete goals for TV coverage that’s proportionate to its growth. “People talk about ESPN coverage for the women’s championship once a year,” she said. “It needs to be talked about throughout the entire year with a goal and plan and action steps to get equal coverage.”
Said ESPN’s Kettering: “Promotion, production quality, equity in number of games — all of that stuff is something that we want as well and we’re striving for.”
Inequalities exist not just in coverage. The men play in larger stadiums, whereas women have sold out each of the past two championships at smaller venues with sometimes limited facilities. Short noted that Lindenwood and Queens shared a bathroom at the NCAA Division II women’s lacrosse championship this year in Salem, Va.
“I actually think the discrepancies are far more significant in Division II and Division III than even in Division I,” Short said. “They’re large in Division I, but in Division II and III, they are so bad with the differences.”
Among the chief complaints is aligning travel party sizes — women’s lacrosse has more players on the field at a time than any other college sport, but has a smaller travel party size than men’s lacrosse. There are also travel and lodging differences and lesser amenities between the women’s and men’s teams at all levels. For those who have advocated for equality for years, their patience is waning.
“This is a thing that’s used quite often to delay women’s equality,” Corbett said. “They say, ‘It takes time.’ If something needs to be done in men’s basketball, it’s done.”
The IWLCA wants to capitalize on the current momentum for equality in women’s sports. There is a groundswell of support for changes at the NCAA level, and women’s lacrosse supporters are working to get as much fixed as quickly as possible. 2022 will mark the 50th anniversary of Title IX, the landmark civil rights legislation prohibiting gender-based discrimination in any school or education program that receives federal money, the interpretation of which has ushered in an era of unprecedented growth for college women’s sports.
“We’re hoping, maybe too optimistically, that this is a genuine opportunity to make some really notable changes,” Livesay said. “That’s our hope. We’ll see how motivated the NCAA is to hear this and make changes moving forward. That’s the big question now.”
Added Cummings: “I don’t think we should be settling for anything less than equal.”