
El Pichichi no se mueve
El Pichichi sigue sin cambios tras los Ășltimos partidos.
ESPN is launching Women's Sports Sundays this summer, shifting its Sunday evening programming to focus on women's sports. This move reflects the growing significance and business potential of women's sports in the media landscape.
There is no longer a debate about the arrival of womenâs sports as a major business driver in the sports media ecosystem. The numbers settled that argument long ago. From record-setting television audiences to rising franchise valuations, expanding sponsorship portfolios, and increased media rights investment, womenâs sports have evolved from a growth story into one of the industryâs most valuable momentum plays.
Networks are no longer experimenting with the category. They are actively building around it. That is what makes ESPNâs decision to shift Sunday evening programming to Womenâs Sports Sundays this summer such an important moment.
When ESPN and Major League Baseball mutually opted out of the final years of their agreement surrounding Sunday Night Baseball, the immediate question became obvious: What fills one of the networkâs most recognizable weekly television windows?
ESPNâs answer was telling.
Rather than force a replacement designed to mirror baseballâs legacy audience, the network chose something far more strategic. It chose trajectory.
The summer Sunday night package coming reportedly next month, features WNBA and NWSL games. Itâs not a full-scale replacement for Sunday Night Baseball. It is a limited-run programming strategy designed to capitalize on one of the fastest-growing audience segments in sports television.
That distinction matters.
This is not ESPN attempting to replicate decades of baseball viewing habits overnight. It is ESPN using premium real estate to accelerate the growth of properties already moving sharply upward.
And from a business standpoint, it is a remarkably low-risk move with substantial upside.
The timing itself is intentional. Once the NBA Finals and Stanley Cup Final conclude next month, the sports television calendar enters a seasonal lull before the NFL returns. Networks still need appointment viewing during those summer months. Particularly live programming capable of driving consistent engagement in an increasingly fragmented media environment.
Womenâs sports provide exactly that.
The WNBA continues to generate unprecedented attention expecting another season of explosive growth following a new CBA extension. The NWSL has steadily expanded its national footprint with four consecutive years of audience gains and growing engagement among younger demographics. Both leagues increasingly attract the kind of audience every media company covets: younger, digitally engaged, socially active consumers whose viewing habits are still being formed.
That last part may be the most important factor in ESPNâs strategy. ESPN is attempting to create something entirely different: a new viewing habit.
Sunday night has long carried significance in the sports television ecosystem. It is premium scheduling territory. By placing womenâs sports into that window, ESPN is signaling that these events are not secondary programming designed to fill airtime. They are the main event.
That message matters both internally and externally.
Internally, it reinforces ESPNâs long-standing investment in womenâs sports through espnW, NCAA womenâs basketball, the WNBA, the NWSL, and numerous collegiate championships. Externally, it sends a message to advertisers, leagues, athletes, and audiences that the network sees long-term value in building around these properties.
And in todayâs media climate, live sports inventory with growth potential is increasingly valuable.
Traditional television audiences continue fragmenting across platforms, streaming services, social media, and on-demand consumption. Yet live sports remain one of the few products capable of consistently generating real-time communal viewing. That reality is why every major media company is aggressively prioritizing sports rights.
ESPN understands this better than anyone.
What makes womenâs sports particularly attractive is not simply current audience size. It is audience trajectory. Growth curves matter. Momentum matters. Cultural relevance matters. Womenâs sports increasingly sit at the intersection of all three.
That is why this programming strategy feels more significant now than it did even several months ago. The broader sports industry continues doubling down on womenâs sports investment because the indicators continue pointing upward. Increased visibility has created increased engagement. Increased engagement has attracted more sponsors, better production investment, and larger audiences. The cycle continues feeding itself.
ESPN is positioning itself directly in the middle of that growth cycle.
If the Sunday night package performs modestly, the network still wins. It strengthens relationships with emerging leagues, delivers meaningful programming inventory during a quieter portion of the sports calendar, and reinforces its positioning with younger audiences and advertisers.
But if the package overdelivers, the implications become far more meaningful.
A breakout rivalry, a transcendent star, or a handful of major ratings performances could permanently alter how networks view womenâs sports programming windows moving forward. At that point, ESPN would not simply have filled the void left behind by Sunday Night Baseball.
It would have helped redefine what Sunday night sports television looks like for the next generation.
That is the real bet being made here. Not on replacing baseball. On building the future.
Barrett Media produces daily content on the music, news, and sports media industries.Sign upfor our newsletters to stay updated and get the latest information right in your inbox.
John Mamola
John Mamola is Barrett Mediaâs sports editor and daily sports columnist. He brings over two decades of experience (Chicago, Tampa/St Petersburg) in the broadcast industry with expertise in brand management, sales, promotions, producing, imaging, hosting, talent coaching, talent development, web development, social media strategy and design, video production, creative writing, partnership building, communication/networking with a long track record of growth and success. He is a five-time recognized top 20 program director in a major market via Barrett Mediâs Top 20 series and has been honored internally multiple times as station/brand of the year (Tampa, FL) and employee of the month (Tampa, FL) by iHeartMedia. Connect with John by email at John@BarrettMedia.com.
The post Womenâs Sports Sundays Is a Bet Worth Making This Summer for ESPN appeared first on Barrett Media.
ESPN's Women's Sports Sundays is a new programming strategy that will showcase women's sports during Sunday evening slots this summer.
The shift aims to capitalize on the growing popularity and business potential of women's sports rather than trying to replicate the legacy audience of baseball.
Women's sports have seen record-setting television audiences, rising franchise valuations, and increased media rights investments, establishing them as a valuable segment in sports media.
By dedicating a prime-time slot to women's sports, ESPN aims to enhance visibility and potentially increase viewership and engagement in women's sports.

El Pichichi sigue sin cambios tras los Ășltimos partidos.
Rodri may not be fit for the FA Cup final against Chelsea, says Guardiola.
Florentino Perez involved in a heated clash with fans at Santiago Bernabeu after Real Madrid's win.
Newcastle United denies making a ÂŁ50 million bid for Luis Suarez.
The article introduces a 'Triple Threat' series profiling Notre Dame players, focusing on CJ Carr, Christian Gray, and Spencer Porath. Each post will feature one offensive player, one defensive player, and one newcomer.
Bruno Fernandes leads an all-star cast at Man United's FA Youth Cup loss
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.