The Asian Age

Women’s Cup watched by 180m

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Dubai, Aug. 10: The recently concluded ICC Women’s World Cup in England saw a record coverage with over more than 180 million people being estimated to have watched the prestigiou­s quadrennia­l tournament and there was an almost 300% increase in viewing hours in comparison to the last edition in 2013. The hosts England won the World Cup defeating India in a thriller by nine runs in the final played at the Lord’s on July 23.

There was significan­t growth in audiences in all territorie­s, but particular­ly impressive was an eightfold increase in viewing hours in South Africa and a huge increase in viewers in India, particular­ly in rural areas, since 2013.

The ICC’s decision to ensure that every match was available for viewing either on television or via live-streaming as part of its commitment to the global growth of the women’s game has paid dividends.

An extraordin­ary 156 million people viewed the event in India, of which 80 million was rural reach and 126 million were for the final alone. India’s fine performanc­es contribute­d to a 500% increase in viewing hours in their country.

In the UK, the World Cup final attracted most viewers for any televised cricket this summer, while the entire event saw a 300% increase in terms of viewing hours compared to last time.

Similarly, there has been a 131% increase in viewing hours in Australia while it is a whopping 861% in South Africa after its team reached the semifinals for the first time.

ICC Chief Executive David Richardson said: “We are absolutely delighted with the impact the Women’s World Cup has had. Instinctiv­ely we felt that the time was right to invest in women’s cricket and take it to the widest possible audience to accelerate the growth of the game and these numbers have confirmed that.”

“We congratula­te all eight teams for providing the entertainm­ent, the cricket was competitiv­e and compelling and when you have that it makes it much easier to attract an audience. The sport must now work collective­ly to maintain interest and continue to drive growth,” he added.

There were 100 million video views across ICC digital platforms and social media channels.

On Twitter, the hashtag #WWC17 was the most tweeted hashtag for women’s sport in 2017 with one million tweets, which is a 24-time increase over the 2013 edition. The hashtag #WWC17Final was the most tweeted hashtag ever for a women’s sports final while the launch of the first ever captain ‘emojis’ for a country versus country sporting event was a big success with a 875-fold jump in tweets using captains’ hashtags in comparison to the 2013 event.

 ??  ?? The England team, winners of the women’s World Cup 2017.
The England team, winners of the women’s World Cup 2017.

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