- April 7, 2023

College Sports Spark Media Madness

Caleb White
Caleb White
Product Marketing Principal
Comscore

March Madness is a big deal, and not just for student-athletes.

March is one of the biggest months for engagement on college sports pages, and March 2023 saw 160 million actions across Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, the highest-ever total for the category.


These March numbers aren’t just large relative to previous years, college sports as a category is competitive with other leagues on social.

League

Total Actions

NBA

360.5m

NFL

177.9m

College Sports

173.3m

MLB

98.1m

NHL

75.4m

MLS

10.3m

Source: Comscore Social, Metrics & Trends, US College Sports, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, Mar 2023

Tournament Trends


The men’s tournament started off with huge engagement levels, with nearly 4.5 million actions on the 18th on NCAA’s owned page alone. This was mainly driven by bracket-breaking upsets and shocking plays.

Towards the end of the tournament, the focus shifted more to gameplay and final results. Though engagement slowed a bit as fewer teams were left on the bracket, there were still nearly 2 million daily engagements at the end of the tournament.

For the women’s tournament, there was almost a completely opposite trend. Posts saw lighter engagement in the beginning but ramped up at the end to surpass the men’s engagement. Much of this was driven by the exciting final games featuring LSU and Iowa and their star players Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark.

Top Teams

While some of the top teams on social, like LSU and UConn, were also the top teams in the tournament, others resonated strongly with their audiences to make it to the top of the charts even if they did not make it to the finals.

Men's Teams

Women's Teams

Teams

Actions

Teams

Actions

UConn

2.3m

LSU

3.7m

Duke

1.6m

Iowa

2.2m

Texas

1.1m

UConn

911k

Miami

1.0m

South Carolina

743k

Kentucky

948k

Kansas

379k

Kansas State

911k

Miami

325k

Arkansas

908k

Virginia Tech

317k

Kansas

898k

Texas

256k

Gonzaga

750k

Notre Dame

241k

San Diego State

735k

Tennessee

231k

Comscore Social, PowerRankings, Custom Category including college basketball teams, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, March 14 – April 4, 2023

Branded Content

On social, several teams, key players, and the NCAA itself took advantage of partnerships with brands and they ranked among the top branded sports posts. Angel Reese’s partnership with TurboTax, for example, performed 5x better than the average for branded posts by sports teams, leagues, and athletes. Some of the top posts:

Top Games on TV: Overall

While social media earns millions of engagements for teams online, it is impossible to discuss the tournament without taking a proper look at where it all begins, on television.

Both the men’s and women’s tournaments saw strong ratings throughout the tournament, with both earning their highest ratings for the championship games. The ratings climbed throughout the length of the tournament, with Final 4 or championship games earning three of the top five spots in both the men’s and women’s tournaments.

Top Games on TV: By Round

Despite the highest ratings overall being earned in the later rounds, earlier rounds of the tournament earned substantial viewership as well.

Michigan State earned the highest ratings across the first two rounds of the men’s tournament with 4.8, and 10.4 respectively. In the later rounds, it was the games involving the Connecticut Huskies that drew the largest audiences, with ratings peaking in the championship game as over 1 in 10 households tuned in.

In the women’s tournament games, Iowa drew the largest viewership, with games involving the Hawkeyes earning the highest ratings in four of the six total rounds. The highest of which came in the national championship where they fell to Louisiana State University, with an average live household rating of 9.5, nearly 3 times higher than the next best ratings earned by Ohio State and Connecticut in the Sweet 16.

The Key Takeaway: Don’t Count College Sports Out

This is especially true for basketball. Just because these teams and players aren’t professionals, does not mean they don’t have appeal to a large audience. After all, the LSU women’s team had more engagement in March than major franchises like the Detroit Lions, the Chicago Blackhawks, and the New York Mets. And for the largest games of the men's tournament, 13% of the country tuned in.

Events like March Madness bring together people from across the country, whether they’re students, alumni, sports bettoers making brackets, or just sports fans looking for more basketball to watch. There’s a tremendous opportunity for brands and media to partner with the college sports industry, and it is certainly one to watch going forward.

Metric Definitions:

Actions - The total number of actions (reactions, shares, comments, retweets, favorites, loves) the specified property receives during the defined time period
Rating - The percentage of the household universe that viewed the classification (network, telecast, ad, etc.). Calculated by dividing the average audience by the total TV households in the selected market(s)

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