MILWAUKEE — Just watch us once and you'll be hooked.
That is the message women's college volleyball programs kept delivering as their sport went relatively unnoticed, struggling to find a television home amid the flurry of football games dominating screens each fall.
''It was an accessibility issue, not necessarily a passion issue,'' Wisconsin middle blocker Carter Booth said. ''I think people are very passionate about the sport. We just never really had the platform or the means to get it out there.''
Now they do – and fans are responding in droves.
As NCAA president Charlie Baker noted last year, women's volleyball has become one of college athletics' hottest properties.
That growth may have been inevitable considering volleyball's popularity as a participation sport.
The number of girls high school volleyball players in 2022-23 hit an all-time high of 470,488, second only to outdoor track and field (486,355), according to the National Federation of State High School Associations. More girls play high school volleyball than basketball in all but nine states.
The three biggest crowds for a women's college volleyball match all happened in the last year, including 92,003 fans attending a Nebraska victory over Omaha at Memorial Stadium. Texas' NCAA Tournament championship game triumph over Nebraska drew a record 1.7 million television viewers, a 115% increase over the previous year.