There’s plenty of star power, but who will take over the mantle from Caitlin Clark as the face of women’s college basketball?
Last year, women’s basketball fans old and young developed a fever that only Caitlin Clark could cure, and her virality went far beyond the degree of renown enjoyed by the average collegiate athlete. Clark was not only the Indiana Fever’s clear top draft pick, but she also garnered a bevy of followers, NIL deals, and influence along the way.
Clark had 1.5 million Instagram followers at the end of her collegiate career, with 47% of them obtained over the 2023 and 2024 Final Four weekends. She now has 2.2 million followers following the WNBA Draft. These figures have paid off for Clark–literally.
Clark was valued at $154,000 by On3, making her the 12th highest NIL earner in women’s basketball in 2023. This year, the ranking rose to #1 with a valuation of $3.1 million, representing a 20-fold increase in NIL sponsorships. Clark turned down Ice Cube’s $5 million offer to play in the Big3 league in favour of the WNBA Draft, and Nike recently offered her an astounding $28 million shoe deal.
Clark made history as the fourth female athlete to appear on Saturday Night Live and the first basketball player to wear Prada during the WNBA Draft. It’s safe to say Clark was the dominant figure in women’s basketball last season, and her momentum isn’t slowing down anytime soon.
While Clark deserves recognition, there are both advantages and disadvantages to the current position. While it’s great for women’s basketball that more eyes are on the game as a whole, UConn star Paige Bueckers discussed the disadvantages of focusing so much attention on one player when asked if she was ready to take over the title of women’s college basketball poster star next season during the women’s tournament this year.
“I think it’s more important for the game to share the spotlight to grow the game and show all the stars of college basketball and not just focus on one particular player,” Bueckers said as a follow-up. “Whether it’s myself, Caitlin, JuJu [Watkins], Angel [Reese]. There are so many big names in college basketball now, talents who deserve recognition.”
Despite Caitlin Clark’s dominance in sports media headlines last season, there is ample star power in women’s collegiate basketball, as Clark and Bueckers have previously emphasised. It is evident that sports media has a long way to go in terms of providing fair and equal coverage of women’s basketball players, and the athletes listed below deserve a lot of media attention next year.
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