The Day

Women hope Sweet 16 is next step to own NCAA tournament TV deal

- By DOUG FEINBERG AP Basketball Wrier

Women's college basketball believes it has the makings for a hit reality TV show with star power driving a marketable product that has a growing audience.

So they're taking the ensemble on the road for the Sweet 16.

The NCAA changed the format of the tournament this year, featuring two regional sites instead of the traditiona­l four. The games in Greenville, South Carolina, and Seattle are the latest step to grow the sport and show the ladies can stand on their own.

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley believes the question of whether women's hoops merits its own March Madness TV contract has already been answered, even though the women's tournament loses money under the current deal.

“Somebody's watching women's basketball," Staley said. "Somebody feels like we're in high demand, and obviously the decision-makers that put us on now realize that they've got to keep putting us on.”

The women's title game will be broadcast on ABC — the first appearance on network television since 1995. Women's basketball is part of a current contract that bundles all NCAA championsh­ips under one deal except for men's basketball and football.

The NCAA is expected to decide by the fall if the women's tournament will become a separate entity after hiring Endeavor, a consulting firm, to determine how to take championsh­ips to market.

“It's an exciting time. Year over year, we continue to demonstrat­e the value that women's basketball brings to that space," said Lynn Holzman, the NCAA vice president of women's basketball. "It'll be exciting to see what the results are of this for the sport itself, but also for the NCAA more broadly in our championsh­ips.”

TV ratings have been trending up over the last two years. This year's regular season was the most viewed

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Lynn Holzman, NCAA vice president for women’s basketball, speaks during a news conference last year in Minneapoli­s. The NCAA changed the format of the women’s tournament this year, featuring two regional sites instead of the traditiona­l four. The games in Greenville, South Carolina and Seattle are the latest step to grow the sport and show the women’s game can stand on its own.
AP FILE PHOTO Lynn Holzman, NCAA vice president for women’s basketball, speaks during a news conference last year in Minneapoli­s. The NCAA changed the format of the women’s tournament this year, featuring two regional sites instead of the traditiona­l four. The games in Greenville, South Carolina and Seattle are the latest step to grow the sport and show the women’s game can stand on its own.

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