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In a year when historic disparities in investment between the menโ€™s and womenโ€™s tournaments have been on full display, ratings for womenโ€™s tournament games have soared.

Last Saturdayโ€™s marquee Sweet Sixteen match-up between Iowa and Connecticut, featuring freshmen superstars Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers, drew 1.56 million viewers on ABC, the second most-watched womenโ€™s Sweet Sixteen game in history. Airing immediately after that match-up, Baylor and Michigan drew 1.22 million viewers. These stellar ratings follow increased first-round viewership; the Tennessee-Middle Tennessee first-round game averaged 633,000 viewers, the most for an opening-round audience since 2010.

Monday nightโ€™s Elite Eight nail-biter between No. 2 Baylor and No. 1 Connecticut in the River Walk region drew 1.70 million viewers, the largest audience for a pre-Final Four womenโ€™s NCAA tournament game in a decade.

The womenโ€™s tournament has also been trending on social media. This week, Axios shared data that reveal that eight of the ten most followed NCAA basketball players in the Elite Eight are women. Fans have also been showing up on social media. The Baylor-Connecticut match-up had 39 million impressions on social media and 9,600 in-game posts across media platforms, far exceeding the social engagement surrounding the menโ€™s basketball games happening the same night.

For the first time in the history of the womenโ€™s tournament, every game of the 2021 NCAA tournament was scheduled to air nationally. Several tournament games were also broadcast on ABC, marking the first time the tournament has aired on broadcast television since 1995.

Tee has been a contributor to The IX Basketball since March Madness 2021 and is currently a contributing editor, BIG EAST beat reporter and curator of historical deep dives.

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