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The South Carolina Gamecocks celebrate after beating the Iowa Hawkeyes in the NCAA women's basketball national championship on Sunday, April 7.
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Iowa guard Caitlin Clark speaks with the media after the game.
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South Carolina coach Dawn Staley cries during a post-game interview.
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Clark, right, and Kate Martin walk off the court after losing to South Carolina.
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Staley hugs Kamilla Cardoso after the game.
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The Gamecocks celebrate after the game.
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Clark reacts in the second half.
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South Carolina's Bree Hall shoots a three point basket over Clark.
Morry Gash/AP
Clark sits on the bench at the end of the game.
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South Carolina guard Raven Johnson blocks a shot by Clark.
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South Carolina and Iowa players go after a loose ball.
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MiLaysia Fulwiley shoots over Iowa's Hannah Stuelke.
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Iowa's Gabbie Marshall and Cardoso of South Carolina fight for the ball.
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Clark runs down a loose ball between South Carolina guard Raven Johnson and center Cardoso.
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Iowa coach Lisa Bluder reacts.
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Clark stands in the middle of the court.
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Marshall steals the ball from Te-Hina Paopao of South Carolina.
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Stuelke and South Carolina's Chloe Kitts, left, and Cardoso eye a loose ball.
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Paopao dribbles the ball.
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Staley directs her team.
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Fulwiley shoots over Stuelke.
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Clark drives up the court past Raven Johnson.
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Fulwiley attempts a layup.
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Actor Jason Sudeikis, center, watches the game.
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Clark reacts after making a three-point basket.
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Clark shoots against South Carolina Gamecocks guard Hall.
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South Carolina's Ashlyn Watkins works against Martin.
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Iowa guard Kylie Feuerbach, center, fights for a loose ball with South Carolina guards Tessa Johnson, left, and Fulwiley, right.
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South Carolina forward Watkins fights for a rebound with Iowa guard Sydney Affolter, left.
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Clark reacts after being fouled.
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Gamecocks fans cheer during the game.
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South Carolina's Cardoso keeps the ball away from Martin and Stuelke of the Iowa Hawkeyes.
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Clark shoots a three-point basket over Hall.
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Players stand for the national anthem ahead of the game.
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Affolter is introduced ahead of the game.
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South Carolina players huddle before the game.
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Fans arrive at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse ahead of the national championship game between the Hawkeyes and the Gamecocks.
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The Iowa Hawkeyes celebrate after beating the UConn Huskies 71-69 in a Final Four semifinal game at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on Friday, April 5, in Cleveland.
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Iowa's Caitlin Clark celebrates after the game. Clark finished with 21 points, nine rebounds and seven assists.
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The Hawkeyes celebrate as the Huskies walk off the court after the game.
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Clark shoots a free throw in final moments of the game.
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UConn guard Paige Bueckers lays on the floor in the second half.
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Clark listens to Iowa coach Lisa Bluder during the second half.
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Ice Brady of the UConn Huskies shoots the ball.
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Iowa's Kate Martin gives a thumbs up after sustaining an injury in the second half.
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Martin jumps to defend a shot by Bueckers.
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Iowa Hawkeyes fans hold up signs during the game.
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Iowa players react from the bench during the second half.
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Bluder reacts in the second half.
Carolyn Kaster/AP
Bueckers fights for a loose ball with Iowa guard Gabbie Marshall during the first half. The Huskies held a 32-26 lead at halftime.
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UConn's Aaliyah Edwards looks to shoot in the first half. Edwards scored 17 points during the game.
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Nika Mühl of the UConn Huskies reacts after a foul in the first half.
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UConn's KK Arnold shoots the ball over Clark.
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Martin is fouled by Edwards during the first half.
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Martin and Arnold #2 of the UConn Huskies fight for the ball.
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Clark shoots the ball over UConn's Ashlynn Shade. UConn held Clark to six points, while shooting 3-of-11 from the field, including 0-6 from the three-point line.
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Iowa Hawkeyes huddle at the beginning of the game.
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The Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse is pictured in the first half of Iowa's game against UConn.
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South Carolina coach Dawn Staley and guard Bree Hall celebrate after defeating the NC State Wolfpack 78-59 in the Final Four of the women's tournament
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NC State's Zoe Brooks walks off the court after losing to the Gamecocks.
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South Carolina's Ashlyn Watkins shoots the ball in the second half. Watkins scored eight points during the game.
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Staley reacts during the game.
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Gamecocks guard MiLaysia Fulwiley controls the ball in the third quarter. Fulwiley scored seven points during the game.
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NC State's River Baldwin fights Chloe Kitts of South Carolina for possession of the ball in the second half.
Morry Gash/AP
Hall celebrates after making a three-point basket during the second half.
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South Carolina's Sania Feagin attempts a lay up while guarded by Baldwin.
Carolyn Kaster/AP
North Carolina State head coach Wes Moore directs his team during the second half.
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South Carolina's Raven Johnson drives around Zoe Brooks of NC State during the first half. The Gamecocks let 32-31 at halftime.
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Katie Peneueta of the NC State Wolfpack looks for an opening during the first half.
Kirby Lee/USA Today Sports/Reuters
Fulwiley and Brooks battle for the ball in the second quarter.
Kirby Lee/USA Today Sports/Reuters
NC State's Saniya Rivers moves the ball down court while South Carolina's Raven Johnson guards in the first quarter.
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Kamilla Cardoso of the South Carolina Gamecocks and Saniya Rivers jump for the opening tipoff.
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Cocky the South Carolina Gamecocks mascot cheers before the game.
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NC State Wolfpack players huddle together before tipoff.
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South Carolina's Te-Hina Paopao walks onto the court during player introductions ahead of the game.
New York CNN  — 

For the first time in its 42-year history, more people watched the women’s NCAA basketball final than the men’s.

The total number of viewers for Sunday’s women’s national championship game between South Carolina and Iowa was 18.9 million, peaking at 24.1 million in the game’s final 15 minutes, according to Nielsen. It was the most-watched women’s college basketball game ever and doubled the previous year’s 9.9 million viewers.

On Monday, the University of Connecticut’s victory over Purdue in the men’s final drew 14.8 million viewers, Nielsen said. That was up a smidge from the 14.7 million who watched last year’s men’s championship game, but fell 4 million viewers short of the women’s final.

The biggest reason why the women outrated the men this year: Iowa sensation Caitlin Clark, who scored 30 points in the Hawkeyes’ 87-75 defeat by the undefeated Gamecocks.

Clark captivated fans all year, setting records on the court and driving the women’s game to viewership records throughout the regular season and the March Madness tournament. Clark finished the 2023-2024 season as the highest scoring collegiate basketball player in history, outpacing Louisiana State sensation (and future NBA legend and Hall of Famer) Pete Maravich, who had set the previous record in 1970.

Clark had been playing with a chip on her shoulder all season after her Hawkeyes lost in the finals the previous year to LSU — a team she and Iowa vanquished earlier in the tournament. She is widely expected to be the top pick in the WNBA draft next week.

To put the women’s championship game viewership in perspective, it outrated every 2023 World Series game and every NBA finals game from last year, according to Nielsen.

The success of this year’s tournament led to many hot takes in sports media about women’s sports finally reaching equal status with men’s. But Clark’s exit from the college game and likely rookie season on the dreadful Indiana Fever — which has the first pick in the WNBA draft — will put those theories to the test later this year.

The WNBA remains financially miniscule, bringing in a reported $200 million in revenue — compared to the NBA’s more than $10 billion. ESPN’s SportsCenter provided 91 seconds of coverage for the average WNBA game, compared to 266 seconds for the average NBA game, according to Nielsen. The WNBA Finals last year averaged just 728,000 viewers a game.

Still, the league is growing, and a celebrity with nationwide name recognition and star power could work to change the WNBA’s fortunes. So far, even before Clark has been drafted, the buzz is boosting ticket sales.

Ticket reseller TickPick said WNBA ticket sales for next season are up 222% from this point last year, and Fever tickets have already outpaced last year’s total by 86%. And Fever home games are setting back fans $81 a ticket — up from just $45 for last season.

Away games won’t get you any help — an opportunity to watch Caitlin Clark play in a rival city costs $108 on average, TickPick said, up 151% from last year’s $43 average ticket price to watch the Fever play an away game.

Oh, yeah, and in the men’s college basketball final Monday, the Huskies won their second-straight championship, beating the Boilermakers, who were in their first final since 1969. Whatever.