UConn Women’s Basketball Team Fuels Windfall for School Finances | The Boneyard

UConn Women’s Basketball Team Fuels Windfall for School Finances

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LisaG
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Archive link here, as it's behind a paywall and I'm not allowed to sign up for anything else, lol.

UConn’s 2025 women’s season generated about $8.5 million of total operating revenue, a 7% increase from 2024 and nearly double 2023 levels, according to data from the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database at Syracuse University.
Ticket sales for women’s basketball games are setting a record, reaching nearly $4 million, according to university data. UConn spokespeople also said that the team brings in more than 30% of the department’s corporate sponsorship revenue, only trailing the men’s basketball team.
For a school’s long-term fiscal health, a championship title is less about a revenue windfall and more about the marketing and recruitment advantages, according to Tamara Lowin, a senior municipal credit analyst at Van Eck Associates. That’s especially important as colleges vie for a shrinking pool of high school graduates.
 
Congratulations to the Team and their exceptional play to earn the comment. GO HUSKIES!!!!!
 
If the school made $8.5M, I wonder what the players made? Maybe Azzi alone could give that figure a run for the money, so to speak.
 
If the school made $8.5M, I wonder what the players made? Maybe Azzi alone could give that figure a run for the money, so to speak.
After operating expenses, wages, and Geno's pay UCONN probably is in the red again.

UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma signed a five-year extension that will once again make him the sport’s highest-paid coach—and increases the potential buyout should he choose to jump to the surging WNBA.

The new deal, which Sportico obtained via a records request, is worth a total of $18.7 million in base pay, starting at $3.34 million next year and ending at $4.14 million in 2028-29. Auriemma’s previous contract, signed in 2021, was set to pay him $3.1 million this upcoming year. The extension pushes him past LSU’s Kim Mulkey ($3.25 million) and South Carolina’s Dawn Staley ($3.2 million) as the sport’s highest-paid coach.
 
If the school made $8.5M, I wonder what the players made? Maybe Azzi alone could give that figure a run for the money, so to speak.
I think that is the gross. The operating costs of the team exclusive of player compensation must be very substantial inclusive of airfare, lodging, food, staff etc.
 
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Archive link here, as it's behind a paywall and I'm not allowed to sign up for anything else, lol.

UConn’s 2025 women’s season generated about $8.5 million of total operating revenue, a 7% increase from 2024 and nearly double 2023 levels, according to data from the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database at Syracuse University.
Ticket sales for women’s basketball games are setting a record, reaching nearly $4 million, according to university data. UConn spokespeople also said that the team brings in more than 30% of the department’s corporate sponsorship revenue, only trailing the men’s basketball team.
For a school’s long-term fiscal health, a championship title is less about a revenue windfall and more about the marketing and recruitment advantages, according to Tamara Lowin, a senior municipal credit analyst at Van Eck Associates. That’s especially important as colleges vie for a shrinking pool of high school graduates.
the last line probably does not apply to Uconn
but certainly does apply to the rest of public education
in ct which of off about 20 percent
 
After operating expenses, wages, and Geno's pay UCONN probably is in the red again.

UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma signed a five-year extension that will once again make him the sport’s highest-paid coach—and increases the potential buyout should he choose to jump to the surging WNBA.

The new deal, which Sportico obtained via a records request, is worth a total of $18.7 million in base pay, starting at $3.34 million next year and ending at $4.14 million in 2028-29. Auriemma’s previous contract, signed in 2021, was set to pay him $3.1 million this upcoming year. The extension pushes him past LSU’s Kim Mulkey ($3.25 million) and South Carolina’s Dawn Staley ($3.2 million) as the sport’s highest-paid coach.
agree total coaching salaries and benefits probably a
in excess of 4 million .,add trainers support staff to that
The cost of player scholarships for 15 players(44k for out of state $660.000 also
travel costs recruiting costs
add in whatever direct payments to players under the house settlement and hard to see operating in the black
operating at a loss has been the norm for all but a few college athletics programs for quite some time
 
I think that is the gross. The operating costs of the team exclusive of player compensation must be very substantial inclusive of airfare, lodging, food, staff etc.
I probably said it poorly. The point of my post was the relative size of $8.5M as compared to someone like Azzi's NIL. When you stop and think about it, $8.5M for a full year revenue is peanuts. Heck, the TV contract has to be a chunk of that.
 
After operating expenses, wages, and Geno's pay UCONN probably is in the red again.

UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma signed a five-year extension that will once again make him the sport’s highest-paid coach—and increases the potential buyout should he choose to jump to the surging WNBA.

The new deal, which Sportico obtained via a records request, is worth a total of $18.7 million in base pay, starting at $3.34 million next year and ending at $4.14 million in 2028-29. Auriemma’s previous contract, signed in 2021, was set to pay him $3.1 million this upcoming year. The extension pushes him past LSU’s Kim Mulkey ($3.25 million) and South Carolina’s Dawn Staley ($3.2 million) as the sport’s highest-paid coach.
Absolutely. I've yet to see an accurate analysis of the subsidy from the taxpayers of the state of Connecticut to Uconn but the entire higher ed system.

It would be naive to think that regardless of the gross revenue generated but there's a substantial subsidy from taxpayers to the higher ed system.
 
I've seen more business/commercial deals with UConn WBB than any other year, especially the last couple months.
 
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