Listen ad-free

March Madness 2024: College Basketball at a Crossroads

The New Yorker Radio Hour

19-03-2024 • 15 mins

As this year’s annual March Madness tournament kicks off, there’s a sense of malaise around men’s college basketball. The advent of the transfer portal is partly to blame, and the trend of top talents departing for the N.B.A. after just one year of college play. “There hasn’t been that kind of charismatic superstar like Zion Williamson at Duke,” Louisa Thomas tells David Remnick, “the big school and the big player, which is the perfect match.” But women’s college basketball is another story. Last year, superstars like Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark helped the sport reach its highest ratings ever for a final. Clark, in particular, with a penchant for nearly forty-foot throws that almost defies belief, has become such a source of fascination for fans that Remnick compares her to LeBron James. “The question is whether or not she can carry that attention with her” into the W.N.B.A. and to the league’s benefit, Thomas wonders, and  if “she can leave some of that attention behind. To what extent is this a unique phenomenon around a unique player?”

You Might Like

The Daily
The Daily
The New York Times
Serial
Serial
Serial Productions & The New York Times
CANADALAND
CANADALAND
CANADALAND
The Decibel
The Decibel
The Globe and Mail
The Big Story
The Big Story
Frequency Podcast Network
The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge
The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge
Manscorp Media Services
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Rachel Maddow Show
Rachel Maddow, MSNBC
Morning Joe
Morning Joe
Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, MSNBC
The Dan Bongino Show
The Dan Bongino Show
Cumulus Podcast Network | Dan Bongino
Pod Save America
Pod Save America
Crooked Media