The Guardian (USA)

Tipping point: 2023 was the year money finally talked in women’s sport

- Emma John

When the 24-year-old Satheesh Shubha set India on course for victory over England in this month’s Test match, it was the first time she had ever batted for her country. And yet Shubha was already worth more than most of the women in India’s cricketing history.

Earlier in the month, Royal Challenger­s Bangalore had purchased her for the second season of the Women’s Indian Premier League, the tournament that changed not just women’s cricket, but the entire landscape of women’s sport.

When its 951 crore (£95.4m) rights deal was announced in January, the WIPL instantly became the second most valuable women’s sports league in the entire world. Nat Sciver-Brunt, the highest paid overseas player in the draft, received £320,000 for the three-week tournament. Alex Hartley, the former England bowler who announced her retirement in August, calls it “unheard of amounts of money”. “And as a result we’ve seen young Indian players come through who’ve done really well. When you have a high- cost competitio­n like the WIPL, people improve quickly.”

2023 may well be remembered as the tipping point year for women’s sport – the one it finally began to realise its commercial possibilit­ies. In November, the US National Women’s Soccer League signed a four-year media rights deal for $240m, a 40-fold increase on its previous agreement. A report by Deloitte

predicted that global revenues would top £1bn in 2024 – a 300% increase on the industry’s valuation in 2020. The creation of NewCo to govern top-tier women’s football in England – breaking the shackles of FA control – proved that the industry is preparing for one giant leap.

The managing partner Jenny Mitton leads the women’s sports team at the marketing agency M&C Saatchi and has seen a seismic shift in the past 12 months as the conversati­on turns from the social benefits of women’s sport – such as health outcomes and gender equality – to its investment potential. It may be a startup compared to the commercial behemoth of the men’s industry, but that’s what makes women’s sport so appealing. “Investors are coming into the space not because it’s a good thing to do, but because in 10 years’ time they want to cash a big cheque,” says Mitton. “And as we’ve not seen any fluctuatio­ns in the market they can make an informed decision that it’s only going in one direction.”

Pam Melbourne, who founded Decibel Sport Management to represent female athletes across a number of sports, says that the creation of NewCo is an acknowledg­ment that the industry needs commercial focus to grow further. She likens the current state of women’s sport to caring for a teenager in the middle of a sudden growth spurt. “One minute you’ve got to change the trousers, then the top, then the feet grow. As soon as you’ve fixed one thing you’ve got to fix something else. That’s not a criticism, it shows how fast it’s growing. The infrastruc­ture is having to catch up.”

The industry has recovered well since the pandemic, which had forced it several steps back on its journey – “the light is back on and people know now that it’s not flickering, it’s only getting brighter,” says Melbourne. Record attendance figures were recorded across women’s sport, from the crowd of 58,500 witnessing England’s grand slam victory over France at Twickenham in the Six Nations to the almost two million spectators at the Fifa Women’s World Cup to the women’s Ashes series, which attracted nearly five times as many spectators as in 2019.

Hartley identifies the joint marketing of the men’s and women’s Ashes this summer as a model for future success. “My frustratio­n is when people have to search for the women’s team’s fixtures. During the Ashes, England’s women were selling out, but when they played Sri Lanka at the end of the summer no one even knew it was happening.”

The broadcast deals that provide such eye-watering sums to men’s sport are currently of less financial significan­ce in the women’s industry, where sponsors provide the greatest income. But the visibility they provide is crucial in engaging new audiences. Mitton was personally disappoint­ed when the BBC and ITV both chose to pass up the offer of free rights to show England’s Red Roses take on Canada in September. “I was one of the few people who got up at 3am during the Women’s Rugby World Cup to watch England play Canada,” says Mitton, “and it was some of the best rugby I’ve seen.”

But change can’t happen overnight, and Mitton points out that the BBC’s investment in women’s sport has been “incredible”. “It’s unfair to say every match suddenly has to be broadcast,” she says, pointing out that the BBC’s Six Nations coverage has improved year on year from mainly highlights and redbutton coverage to the stage where almost all games are broadcast live.

One of the most rapidly growing markets in women’s sport in 2023 was Australia, thanks to the strong performanc­es of the co-host nation in the Fifa Women’s World Cup. The Matildas’ was the biggest-selling sports shirt in a country where women’s football has now overtaken men’s in both merchandis­e sales and viewership. “It was like what we saw here in the UK around the Euros,” says Melbourne. “Every major tournament, whatever sport it may be, is validating the propositio­n.

All roads are pointing towards meteoric growth.”

That doesn’t come without challenges. A year-long contract dispute between Netball Australia and players in the country’s profession­al Super Netball league showed that female athletes, increasing­ly aware of their own value, are demanding a say in the commercial decisions being taken on their behalf. They went without pay for months as their players’ associatio­n lobbied for the revenue-sharing model that was eventually agreed to by the organising body this month.

Jess Thirlby, the head coach who guided the England Roses to their first World Cup final in August, is relieved that a settlement has been reached – it was “hard and sad” to hear of the financial hardship the out-of-contract players were experienci­ng. “As uncomforta­ble as it might be watching that play out,” says Thirlby, “it feels to me there was a real standing to continue to fight for what they feel is the right direction of travel for the players and the sport.”

Her own side’s successes at the World Cup in South Africa have also boosted the global game – a more competitiv­e internatio­nal scene is vital for the sport to increase its audience appeal. After England’s groundbrea­king gold at the Commonweal­th Games in 2018, Thirlby knew more was needed to mount a continuing challenge to Australia and New Zealand’s historic dominance.

“If you look at the infrastruc­ture and the lack of depth in the talent pool when I came into the post, it’s a stretch to be competing in the top two and making finals,” says Thirlby. Beating New Zealand to reach a World Cup final that had eluded them throughout the 60-year-old tournament was a major shift was credit to “an evolving and transforma­tional” group of players.

Player welfare has been identified as a new frontline in women’s sport’s all-conquering campaign – Hartley is already warning, for instance, of the dangers of “chasing the money” across a burgeoning universe of franchise cricket. “They’re going to want to play in every series – I know I’d definitely want to. But you could burn yourselves out before the summer’s even started with all that’s going on.”

Welfare is also at the centre of the debate in women’s boxing over the move away from 10 two-minute rounds. Calls for the adoption of the men’s format have intensifie­d since Amanda Serrano defended her featherwei­ght world titles against Danila Ramos in 12 three-minute rounds in October, and only this month Serrano vacated her WBC title after the World Boxing Council refused to allow her to defend it in the same fashion. Mikaela Mayer, challengin­g Natasha Jonas for her IBF world welterweig­ht title in January, has announced that she wants the fight contested in the longer format and Jonas says she is open to the possibilit­y.

But Jonas points, also, to the dearth of independen­t research about the different formats. “Everyone’s got science to back up what they’re saying,” says Jonas – the WBC, for instance, insists that the data shows that the risk to women increases drasticall­y, far more than men’s, with an additional 16 minutes of ring time. “There’s no independen­t research being done to tell us, the athletes, which is safer.”

For motorsport, the issue continues to be one of opportunit­y. Abbi Pulling, who competed in two seasons of the all-female W Series, was part of the first intake to the F1 Academy, establishe­d with the aim of developing a female pathway into the sport’s top tier. Her seven podiums, two pole positions and four fastest laps helped her to finish fifth in the standings, but she admits that she is lucky to be racing at all.

“If it wasn’t for these opportunit­ies it’s a sad reality that my dream and career would be over,” says Pulling, who points to the difficulty of finding funding in an extremely expensive sport. “If I was a guy I wouldn’t still be racing.” Instead she finished the season driving in front of 400,000 on the weekend of the US Grand Prix in Austin, pushing the eventual champion, Marta García, all the way to the chequered flag.

At the elite level, 2023 was a year that change came quickly. In the light of the damning conclusion­s found in the Independen­t Commission for Equity in Cricket’s report on discrimina­tion across the game, the England and Wales Cricket Board announced that the women’s national side would be paid the same match fees as men. The superstar all-rounder Sciver- Brunt will have netted roughly half a million pounds from her various contracts this year. By the time she turns 20, Alice Capsey may already have earned as much as a double World Cup-winner such as Lydia Greenway made from her entire career.

Melbourne says it’s important in these circumstan­ces to remember that life remains hard for female athletes further down the pyramid. The golfers competing in September’s Solheim Cup, for instance, had plenty to celebrate when the tournament was given its own window in the calendar, and aggressive­ly marketed: its viewed hours increased 50% on 2022, climbing from 6 million to 9 million. “If you look at the Ladies European Tour, you’ll get a very different story,” says Melbourne. “These are top 50 golfers, but very few have equipment sponsors and it’s a battle to survive.

“There’s a danger people think female athletes are earning a fortune, whereas it’s actually a struggle for most Women’s Super League footballer­s to get a boot deal. Sport needs to check that the gap doesn’t keep growing and leave a lot of people behind.”

Festive fixtures Thursday: West Ham (h), Sunday: Fulham (a)

Liverpool: P18 Pts 39 GD+21

The case for The league table, the consistenc­y of results and a five-point advantage over Manchester City (who have a game in hand) are good enough reasons to start with, although there are more factors behind Liverpool’s recovery as title contenders. Senior players who know what it takes to win the Premier League and capitalise on a drop-off by City – Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk, Alisson and Trent Alexander-Arnold – have taken the failure last season to qualify for the Champions League as a personal affront to lead Liverpool’s revival. A new-look, high-grade midfield has settled faster and more cohesively than perhaps even Jürgen Klopp envisaged. The squad has the depth in most department­s and a range of attacking options that are the envy of many Premier League clubs, and Liverpool have an ability to rescue the occasional off-day.

The case against Dramatic comebacks and late winners are hallmarks of champions – especially when delivered with 10 men – but Liverpool have needed them frequently in a season when, with the exception of the home win over Aston Villa and the Carabao Cup rout of West Ham, they have rarely controlled an opponent or a game from start to finish. Liverpool are a team in transition, and at times it shows. Results against other members of the socalled big six need to improve. Liverpool are bottom of that mini-league and the only side not to beat a “big six” rival this season, having drawn with Chelsea, Manchester City, Manchester United and Arsenal and lost to Tottenham. With Joël Matip out for the rest of the season Liverpool could be seriously stretched by another injury in central defence. Klopp claims a solution is unlikely to be found in the January transfer window. AH

Festive fixtures Boxing Day: Burnley (a), Monday 1 January: Newcastle (h)

Aston Villa: P18 Pts 39 GD+16

The case for Villa are free of expectatio­n but, make no mistake, Unai Emery, demanding at the best of times, is aware of how well placed they are. Villa Park has become a fortress, with Villa winning 15 of their past 16 home games. Emery has played down comments from peers billing his side title contenders but his starting XI has proven capable of toppling the best. Emiliano Martínez is an elite goalkeeper, their midfield axis of Boubacar Kamara, John McGinn and Douglas Luiz is one of the finest in the division and they have pace to burn in talisman Ollie Watkins and forwards Moussa Diaby and Leon Bailey. Unlike most of their rivals, Villa can focus almost solely on the league until March, when their Europa Conference League adventure restarts in the last 16. Aside from an FA Cup trip to Middlesbro­ugh in January, they can go full steam ahead in pursuit of a first league title since 1981.

The case against Can Villa handle the noise? For most of this squad, a title race represents new territory. The obvious concern is whether Emery has enough strength in reserve. For example, when Leander Dendoncker entered against Arsenal, Villa’s grip loosened. Watkins has started every league game and although Jhon Durán has impressed in glimpses there is no likefor-like replacemen­t. The same goes for Martínez. At the same time, Villa have shown this season that they can absorb the absence of key players such as Tyrone Mings and Emi Buendía. Perhaps Sheffield United’s dogged display last Friday, when Villa seemed to run out of ideas against a low block and almost ended up empty-handed, will provide a blueprint for others in how to stifle Emery’s winning machine. BF

Festive fixtures Boxing Day: Manchester United (a), Saturday: Burnley (h)

Tottenham: P18 Pts 36 GD+13

The case for Nobody thought that Tottenham would feature in this kind of article at the beginning of the season given what had happened the last time out: the implosion under Antonio Conte; also the sale of Harry

Kane in August. By the same token, nobody thought that Spurs would be top of the table after 10 games but they were, having made their best start since 1960-61. There was a statistic that said they became the 13th team to have 26 points or more after 10 matches of a Premier League season; six of the previous 12 went on to win the title, four were runners-up, Arsenal finished third in 2007-08 and Newcastle were sixth in 1994-95. In other words, make this kind of start and history says you are almost always in it for the long haul. Spurs had a five-game wobble thereafter but it said everything about the buy-in which Ange Postecoglo­u has generated that there was no soul-searching/mutiny. The manager’s bold style has found a neat fit with players and fans alike; the opening 10 games showed what is possible when everybody is available.

The case against Spurs are at the beginning of their project under Postecoglo­u and lack the needed quality in all areas and, moreover, the strength in depth – even if they have no European football to clutter their schedule. Given the club’s return of one trophy from Daniel Levy’s 22-year chairmansh­ip (the 2008 League Cup), it is surely too much to ask for them to suddenly win the biggest of them all in domestic terms. DH

Festive fixtures Thursday: Brighton (a), Sunday: Bournemout­h (h)

Manchester City: P17 Pts 34 GD +20

The case for At a club built to win and keep winning Pep Guardiola’s relentless need to do so has landed five titles in six years and a determinat­ion to “keep being there” (a mantra of the Catalan’s) is the fuel that propels his players, too. Seven points from the past 18 is not championsh­ip-retaining form but after Manchester City’s Club World Cup triumph Guardiola can draw on three years ago. Then, after a point at West Brom in mid-December and sitting five behind Tottenham, Guardiola turned the team around and a 15-game winning streak motored them to the title. Despite the recent slump the gap to Arsenal is only six points with a game in hand. Oh, and Kevin De Bruyne, missing since the opening minutes of the season, is due back soon.

The case against How to replace a treble-winning captain such as Ilkay Gündogan was the problem Guardiola wrestled with in the close season. His answer was Mateo Kovacic, who is not in the same cultured class, and City also lost a key dressing-room influence. Riyad Mahrez, too, left and his successor, Matheus Nunes, has thus far been peripheral. Zoom out and motivating a squad which has been the champions of the past three seasons is a further considerab­le challenge for Guardiola. JJ

Festive fixtures Wednesday: Everton (a), Saturday: Sheffield United (h)

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