Why Pro Athlete's Daughters Are Playing Volleyball
Interesting article. My wife just finished watching the All SEC National Championship volleyball match between Kentucky and Texas A&M. (She watches way more sports than I do -- golf, tennis, College World Series, etc.)
Is volleyball going to gain on basketball in popularity? I note that one advantage it has is that men's volleyball isn't nearly as big. Thus, women volleyball players don't run up as much against the criticism I've heard of women's basketball -- "I can go down to the Y any afternoon and see better." True or not, there are thousands upon thousands of guys who played basketball in HS who watch the women's game and are turned off by what they see. It was the reason Caitlin Clark had such an impact. Those thousands of guys couldn't do what she does, hadn't seen it much before, and found it spectacular and fun to watch. A "big" rebounding her own miss to shoot another layup at the rim just doesn't do it for them, even if it wins games. I'm not saying it's right; I'm just saying that is the thinking, and telling people what they should enjoy rarely works.
From the article:
Girls who played volleyball, their parents and family members are likely to watch volleyball. $ chase eyeballs. Athletic departments chase $. What do things look like in 20-30 years?
Interesting article. My wife just finished watching the All SEC National Championship volleyball match between Kentucky and Texas A&M. (She watches way more sports than I do -- golf, tennis, College World Series, etc.)
Is volleyball going to gain on basketball in popularity? I note that one advantage it has is that men's volleyball isn't nearly as big. Thus, women volleyball players don't run up as much against the criticism I've heard of women's basketball -- "I can go down to the Y any afternoon and see better." True or not, there are thousands upon thousands of guys who played basketball in HS who watch the women's game and are turned off by what they see. It was the reason Caitlin Clark had such an impact. Those thousands of guys couldn't do what she does, hadn't seen it much before, and found it spectacular and fun to watch. A "big" rebounding her own miss to shoot another layup at the rim just doesn't do it for them, even if it wins games. I'm not saying it's right; I'm just saying that is the thinking, and telling people what they should enjoy rarely works.
From the article:
Youth volleyball doesn’t get the same level of attention that the youth game does in sports like basketball or soccer, but there is a travel circuit that is absolutely massive. Calvin Booth described convention centers that hold over 100 courts with action from dawn till dusk. “There’s games going on from 8 am till 8 pm,” he said. “The amount of girls playing the sport is probably mind-blowing if you’re not really familiar with it.”
“It all starts at the grassroots,” Spears said. “If you came to one of these USAV volleyball tournaments and saw how many young women and girls are playing the game, and how invested the parents are, people would understand more why the game is starting to generate what it’s generating. You can go to a convention center and see 6,000 girls playing volleyball, whereas with a basketball tournament it’s probably 800.”
Girls who played volleyball, their parents and family members are likely to watch volleyball. $ chase eyeballs. Athletic departments chase $. What do things look like in 20-30 years?
