
Something new is at stake in the women's NCAA Tournament: Money
Money is on the line, too.
Every game that a school plays between the First Four through the Final Four — making the championship game doesn't count — will earn what the NCAA calls a 'unit,' essentially one slice of the annual television revenue brought in from the NCAA's media rights deal to broadcast the tournament. All units earned by a conference's members during a women's tournament will be paid by the NCAA to the conference, which then splits up the pool of money and redistributes it back to the schools over the next three years.
At stake this year are 132 units worth a combined $15 million, meaning that if No. 1 overall seed UCLA advances to the championship game, it would earn the Big Ten conference $1.3 million to be paid out through 2028. (Conferences use different methods to decide which schools receive how much.) That pool available for tournament teams will grow to $20 million in 2026, $25 million in 2027 and increase by 2.9% annually after that, the same rate as other Division I funds.
There's a reason why the NCAA landed on this unit-based system: It is the same one that's been used to reward men's teams in the NCAA Tournament since 1991.
Between 1997 and 2018, the combined units earned by men's teams from the Big Ten Conference alone raked in an estimated $340 million, according to a 2019 analysis by The Associated Press.
During the same span, meanwhile, women's basketball teams including powerhouses Connecticut, Tennessee and South Carolina earned zilch.
Among the numerous books on sports written by Andrew Zimbalist, an economics professor at Smith College, is 1999's 'Unpaid Professionals: Commercialism and Conflict in Big-Time College Sports,' in which he argued for the NCAA to adopt a unit-based payment system for women's basketball. Zimbalist told NBC News that when Myles Brand was the NCAA president from 2003 to 2009, he had spoken with Brand about fixing what he called the discriminatory disparity that saw men's teams, but not their women's counterparts, paid for their performance.
'It never had any justification,' Zimbalist said.
Why did it take 34 years to fix? The longtime argument against such a move — that the men's tournament drew more viewers and was thus more valuable — ignored that the women's tournament nonetheless also drew millions of viewers as well, and could have drawn even more had it been marketed equally to the men's, Zimbalist said.
'It never would have made any sense to say that women should get paid zero, because the women in fact were attracting customers and revenue,' he said.
That 34-year gap between the first tournament payouts for men and women was why in January, when an NCAA council approved a fund to start the payments, Danielle Donehew, the executive director of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association, called it a 'momentous victory' that was 'the culmination of decades of hard work.'
That victory arrived, in part, because of pressure. In 2021, women's basketball players taking part in the NCAA Tournament documented on social media the disparities in how they were treated compared to the men, ranging from paltry weight rooms to meager gift bags. With players agitating for equal treatment and the public asking questions, the NCAA hired a law firm to conduct a gender equity assessment. The findings, released in 2021, were scathing.
'The NCAA's broadcast agreements, corporate sponsorship contracts, distribution of revenue, organizational structure, and culture all prioritize Division I men's basketball over everything else in ways that create, normalize, and perpetuate gender inequities,' wrote the firm Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP.
The NCAA instituted a few changes immediately, such as allowing the women's tournament to finally use 'March Madness' in its marketing, after previously limiting its use solely to the men's tournament. Four years after the Kaplan report, there were indications last summer that unit-based payouts were coming to women's basketball. And when they were officially approved in January, the NCAA attempted to reward women according a standard equal to or better than the men, whose units earnings are paid out over a six-year period.
The fund that pays out units in the women's basketball tournament is capped at $15 million this year because it represents 26% of the NCAA's annual revenue from the media rights deal it inked with ESPN to broadcast the women's tournament, the same percentage men's teams drew in 1991. Men's teams in the tournament currently take in a slightly lower percentage of annual revenue, about 24%.
Still, the total pool of money available to be earned by men's teams in the tournament this year is over $200 million more than the women's pool. Where a unit in the women's tournament will be valued at around $114,000 this year, a unit in the men's tournament is worth around $2 million.
The reason? Television.
It wasn't a coincidence that men's teams began earning payouts in 1991; that year, CBS began a six-year agreement, valued at $1 billion at the time, to exclusively broadcast the men's tournament.
Revenue from the rights to broadcast the Division I men's basketball tournament have skyrocketed since. Last year alone, the NCAA's deal granting CBS and Turner the rights to broadcast the men's basketball tournament brought in $950 million — the lion's share of the NCAA's $1.3 billion in revenue, according to financial statements. Next year, the deal alone will pay the NCAA more than $1 billion — bringing in more in one year than the NCAA will be paid over the entire life of its current eight-year, $920 million contract with ESPN to air the women's basketball tournament along with the championships of more than 20 other NCAA sports.
The NCAA could have broken off the women's basketball tournament into its own media rights deal, but opted to keep it as part of a larger package. The women's tournament portion of that package is valued at about $65 million annually, NCAA President Charlie Baker told the AP last year.
'Yes, it's a bundle,' Baker said at the time, 'but it's a bigger bundle and it's a bigger bundle that will be much better.'
Fueled by the popularity of then-Iowa superstar Caitlin Clark facing dynastic South Carolina, last year's women's NCAA championship game drew a record 18.7 million viewers — 4 million more than the men's title game, making it the most watched basketball game since 2019, including the NBA.
'If you want to go back to this historical argument and say, 'Oh, we should remunerate based upon the value that they create,' then women should be getting paid more this year than the men, not 1/15th the value of the men,' Zimbalist said. 'To me, it's highway robbery. It's the worst example of exploitation of women that you can imagine. So they wait 34 years, and then they finally give them crumbs. And I don't know what Charlie Baker thinks he's doing, but I think it's totally unacceptable.'
Whether the enormous difference in the value of units between the men's and women's tournaments can be narrowed won't be known until 2032, when the media rights deals for both tournaments next come up for bidding. Packaging the women's basketball tournament in that bundle with other NCAA championships undervalued the women's tournament, according to the 2021 Kaplan report, whose analysis suggested the rights for the women's basketball tournament alone could have sold for $81-$112 million in 2025. Yet the NCAA opted to keep women's basketball as part of that larger bundle when it reupped its deal with ESPN last year.
'The ultimate question would have been in the NCAA's mind and their consultants' mind is, 'OK, if we sell the NCAA women's tournament with all the other events, we're going to get X. If we sell the women's tournament alone and the other championship events, we're going to get X plus Y. Well, is that number going to be bigger than if we just sold them all together?'' said Bob Thompson, a former television executive at Fox Sports who now runs his own consulting firm, Thompson Sports Group.
'And they could face the possibility that someone would say, 'I want the women's tournament, I don't want anything else,' and then those events, they're sort of sitting there off by themselves, and is anybody going to really go after them? And for the NCAA, it's extremely important that those events see the light of day and are on television, and is on as broad-based television as possible, which is why I think they're very happy with the ESPN deal and putting the entirety of it on ESPN.'
Experts are watching to see in the future whether the NCAA will spin off the women's tournament into its own media rights package, combine it with the men's tournament or keep it in a bundle.
Within women's basketball, the drastic difference in value between men's and women's payouts is noted. But having them at all, starting this year, was described by Duke coach Kara Lawson in January as a 'step forward that is really valuable.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Texas makes history at No. 1 in college football's 2025 preseason poll
The Buckeyes received 20 first-place votes heading an almost equally crowded field of Big Ten contenders. The No. 1 vs No. 2 matchup in the season opener is unprecedented in the history of the coaches poll, and the hype leading up to the clash in Columbus will be as well. TOP 25: Complete preseason US LBM coaches poll Penn State, expected to be Ohio State's primary Big Ten challenger, is No. 3 with 14 top nods, giving the preseason poll three teams with double-digit first-place votes for the first time since 2012. Georgia, accustomed to high starting positions in recent years, will begin at No. 4 while claiming three No. 1 votes. Notre Dame, last season's runner-up, didn't pick up any firsts in preseason balloting but enters the campaign in good position at No. 5. The last two No. 1 votes went to Clemson, which will open at No. 6 overall. Oregon is No. 7, with Alabama, LSU and Miami (Fla.) rounding out the initial top 10. The Crimson Tide's ranking at No. 8 is the lowest in the preseason poll since the second season under Nick Saban in 2008. The SEC, in addition to its quartet ranked No. 9 or higher, has a total of nine teams in the Top 25, with a couple more just outside the poll. The Big Ten has six ranked squads in all. Those include No. 12 Illinois getting its highest starting spot since 1990, and last year's surprise playoff team Indiana opening at No. 19. The Big 12 has five teams ranked, albeit none higher than defending champion Arizona State at No. 11. The ACC placed its two favorites in the top 10 but only one other, No. 16 SMU, landed in the top 25. No. 25 Boise State is the lone representative of the Group of Five leagues to crack the poll.


The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
NCAA basketball tournament won't expand for 2026, possible in 2027
"Expanding the tournament fields is no longer being contemplated for the 2026 men's and women's basketball championships. However, the committees will continue conversations on whether to recommend expanding to 72 or 76 teams in advance of the 2027 championships," Gavitt said. One of the most divisive topics in college hoops, the expansion of the tournament had been picking up steam in recent months by the high powers of college sports. At a Big 12 meeting in May, NCAA president Charlie Baker told reporters the NCAA had "good conversation" with its media partners about the possibility of increasing the number of teams in the field and wanted a final determination in the coming months. On July 10, Gavitt said no decision was made on tournament expansion after it was "discussed at length" during meetings for the committees. While those in power had building toward expansion, the possibility of it has drawn the ire of college basketball enthusiasts, with the common belief adding more teams ruins what is considered a perfect tournament, with any and all tweaks unwarranted. The men's tournament expanded from 53 teams to 64 in 1985, and the format stood until 2011, when the First Four was introduced and grew the field from 65 to 68 teams. On the women's side, the bracket increased from 48 teams to 64 in 1994, and the First Four was also implemented in 2022. When the First Four was expanded, it meant more at-large selections and conference tournament champions had to play their way into participating in the first round of the tournament. It led to Cinderella runs to the Final Four like Virginia Commonwealth in 2011 and UCLA in 2021. NCAA Tournament expansion history Here's a look at the history of the NCAA men's tournament expansion: 1951 : expands from eight to 16 teams : expands from eight to 16 teams 1953 : grows to 22 teams : grows to 22 teams 1975 : expands to 32 teams : expands to 32 teams 1979 : grows to 40 teams : grows to 40 teams 1980 : expands to 48 teams : expands to 48 teams 1983 : grows to 52 teams : grows to 52 teams 1985 : expands to 64 teams : expands to 64 teams 2001 : adds one team for opening round play-in, expands to 65 : adds one team for opening round play-in, expands to 65 2011: First Four added, grows field to 68 Here's the expansion history of the NCAA women's tournament: 1982: 32 teams 32 teams 1983: grows to 36 teams grows to 36 teams 1984: dwindles back to 32 teams dwindles back to 32 teams 1986: grows to 40 teams grows to 40 teams 1989: expands to 48 teams expands to 48 teams 1994: grows to 64 teams grows to 64 teams 2022: First Four added, expands to 68 teams Contributing: Craig Meyer


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
NCAA makes huge decision on the future of March Madness amid expansion discussions
The NCAA will not expand the men's and women's tournaments in 2026 and will stay at 68 teams making the field, the organization's senior vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt announced Monday. Conversations are still ongoing within the NCAA about adding more teams to the prestigious postseason tournament field. The tournaments staying at 68 teams brings a sigh of relief to most college basketball fans, who want March Madness to stay exclusive. If the NCAA tournaments were to expand the field, it would create more at-large spots for teams, as more conferences are not on the way. Some in sports have wanted more teams to participate in March Madness, as currently under 20 percent of teams get to The Big Dance. More games will equal more revenue, even if the quality of teams as a whole will drop by lowering the standards to make the bubble. The NCAA men's tournament last expanded in 2011 from 65 teams to 68 teams, expanding from one play-in game the Tuesday before the Round of 64 gets underway to four. The play-in game was first introduced in 2001, as the tournament expanded from 64 of 65 teams. Before that, the last expansion to the tournament happened in 1985, when the selection committee chose 64 teams instead of 53. A popular model for adding teams has seen only six more teams join the field, giving every No 11 and 12 seed a play-in game instead of only half of them. Any changes will have to wait until the 2027 season, as the tournament field will stay at 68 for now.