The Gophers volleyball team exists within a conundrum.
It will open the 2022 season with its usual Big Ten title and national championship aspirations. It will start a treacherous nonconference schedule this weekend on a road trip to the Longhorn State to face Baylor, TCU and Texas. Later it will dig into Big Ten play — a weekly grind in the deepest volleyball conference in America. It will do this with a ferociously talented roster playing in front of thousands of fans for every home match at Maturi Pavilion.
While that is happening, the team will be relegated on a local and national media level to the role of niche sport.
"I keep asking, what more do we have to do to be a revenue sport?" Gophers coach Hugh McCutcheon said earlier this month.
It's a fair question.
In the decade McCutcheon has been at the U, the volleyball program has increased ticket revenue by at least 473%. Gophers ticket revenue was $120,000 in his first season (2012), and that number grew to $687,000 by 2020, the first year of the pandemic. During his tenure, the team has ranked in the top five for national attendance every season.
Ticket growth has been steady and comes at a far greater rate than with every other major revenue sport at the university, several of which show either static or declining ticket revenue over the same period.
It also makes sense. McCutcheon has won 80% of his matches, reached nine NCAA Sweet 16s and three Final Fours in 10 seasons and won two Big Ten titles.