• Loading stock data...
Saturday, January 31, 2026

Sabrina-Steph Wasn’t the ‘Battle of the Sexes’—But It Was Part of the Bigger War

  • There were no pig-related gifts in the three-point shootout, but there was a national prime-time basketball audience.
  • As the league eyes a new media rights deal, Saturday’s showdown could ultimately be an important factor.
FOS Illustration
Exclusive

WNBA Union Leader Says CBA Talks Not ‘Constructive’

The sides have not met for a full bargaining session this year.
Read Now
January 30, 2026 |

On Saturday night of NBA All-Star weekend, Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu faced off against her idol, Warriors guard Stephen Curry, in a new three-point exhibition. Ionescu went first and put up 26 points, identical to Damian Lillard’s winning score in the main competition.

The contest, which Curry narrowly won with 29 points, was the first formal head-to-head competition between an NBA and WNBA player. (Afterward, some were already calling for a Caitlin Clark-Curry showdown next year.) The WNBA is drawing its best viewership in decades, and last night’s event put one of the league’s biggest stars in front of millions more basketball fans than usual.

Back in July, Ionescu set a WNBA three-point contest record, scoring 37 out of 40 possible points. She sank 20 shots in a row to surpass Curry’s NBA-record 31 points. Ionescu called up Curry after her win, laughing and “still in shock,” as she told reporters before Saturday’s matchup. Then she jokingly challenged him to a shootout on X (formerly known as Twitter), and a few days later, Curry said on ESPN that he had to chase her record, and the two needed to decide the best three-point shooter. Cut to January, when mic’ed up before a Warriors game, Curry said that he and Ionescu should “settle this once and for all.” A few days later, the official announcement followed.

The effect was setting in early—Ionescu gained 60,000 Instagram followers ahead of the competition in the three weeks since Curry challenged her, according to data from Social Blade. She got 20,000 alone the day after the official announcement was made.

“I do think that there are folks that [will have tuned in] that have just not paid attention to the quality and the level of athleticism in the WNBA,” says Sara Gotfredson, who founded Trailblazing Sports Group to create more commercial partnerships in women’s sports.

It’s easy to draw a comparison to the “Battle of the Sexes,” a prime-time, head-to-head matchup in 1973 between two of the sport’s biggest names, one man and one woman: Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King. 

“King describes that event as a true catalyst for social change,” says Caroline Fitzgerald, founder of the women’s sports marketing and consulting firm Goals.

The tone of last night’s competition was much different thanks to five decades of Title IX. “Billie knew that was so much bigger than sport. …There was this expectation that women couldn’t compete at the highest levels,” said Danette Leighton, CEO of King’s Women’s Sports Foundation. “It’s so nice to see where we are in 2024, this mutual respect between elite athletes.”

Unlike the tennis match, Ionescu didn’t gift her opponent a piglet, as King did, a nod to Riggs’s calling himself “the No. 1 male chauvinist pig.” This contest grew out of the Bay Area ballers’ long-standing friendship rather than a sexist challenge.

Still, an event where female athletes compete in front of a national audience in prime time is important for women’s basketball—both from a cultural and business standpoint.

Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Giving the People What They Want

Fans love watching female athletes compete on a level playing field with male competitors. Take former Vanderbilt football kicker Sarah Fuller, Brown baseball player Olivia Pichardo, or former NASCAR driver Danica Patrick. When King faced Riggs in 1973, more than 30,000 people attended the match, while another 90 million viewers tuned in worldwide.

“There’s clearly something,” Fitzgerald says. “People like to see this kind of competition.”

The matchup is a perfect storm for brands, Fitzgerald says, between the story lines, competition, values of gender equity, and passionate women’s basketball viewers. WNBA fans are a great return for advertisers—ads running during the 2023 WNBA Finals were 30% more effective than they were the year before, according to data from the TV ad-tracking platform EDO, while the ’23 NBA Finals were 29% less effective than they were in ’22.

“I just think it checks every single box for a brand that’s looking to get involved or enhance their marketing strategy through partnerships in sports,” Fitzgerald says.

Certain elements of this competition made it particularly enticing for viewers and advertisers, like the two shooters’ friendship, the natural way the showdown came together, and the fact that Ionescu had Curry on her screensaver and bedroom posters growing up. “I just think that fans feel that authenticity,” Gotfredson says of how it all came together.

Another element Fitzgerald says matters: Fans on both sides had something to root for. The 26-year-old Ionescu is a newer superstar, defending her title against one of the best shooters and most popular athletes of all time.

Plus, the two competed from the same line. Ionescu was originally set to shoot from WNBA distance, which is about the same as in FIBA, but she asked to switch to the NBA line because she says that’s the range she shoots and practices from anyway.

“I think it’s important that fans that are just tuning in are realizing that she is doing the exact same thing that the men are doing,” Gotfredson says. “I think there’s equity from the get-go, and I love that about this.”

The Bottom Line

Ionescu said that she’d been asked a few times to compare the competition to the “Battle of the Sexes.”

“This is just an opportunity, and sometimes that’s all you need to be able to go out there and shut a lot of people up, but also continue to thank those people that are continuing to push for what’s right,” Ionescu said before the contest.

A few weeks before facing Riggs, King helped secure women receiving equal prize money as men at the U.S. Open. Ionescu didn’t exactly carry the future of women’s sports on her shoulders last night, but WNBA salaries are a long way from being equal to those in the NBA.

The WNBA gets $25 million annually from ESPN, and another $13 million per year from Scripps Ion, in deals running through the 2025 season. For reference, the NBA receives a combined $2.6 billion annually from Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery.

More fans lead to more attendance, viewership, and advertisers. (See: “Clarkonomics.”) All of those metrics attract a more lucrative media rights deal, which will begin in the 2026 season. And as we’re seeing with the NWSL, a record media rights deal trickles down to record player contracts.

Last night could be a bigger deal than we realize.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

University of Southern California

College Athletic Departments Are Wooing Recruits With Content Studios

Schools are creating content studios to win recruits and donor dollars.
Dec 25, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets forward Spencer Jones (21) reacts against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at Ball Arena

Spencer Jones Is Having a Moment in the NBA—and on LinkedIn

The Nuggets forward and Stanford grad is a prolific poster and investor.

Featured Today

Tim Jenkins

How One NFL Pass Turned Into a Career on YouTube

Tim Jenkins missed the NFL. He took his football IQ to YouTube.
January 17, 2026

Sports Goes All In on Non-Alcoholic Drinks Boom

Athletes, teams, and leagues are pouring money into the NA beverage category.
Tulsa Portal House
January 16, 2026

Inside the Tulsa Portal House: ‘This Will Translate to Wins’

The Golden Hurricane set up an over-the-top battle station for football recruiting.
Black Rabbit
January 10, 2026

The Netflix Star Who Makes Sure NBA Players Have Clean Towels

How a Nets staffer landed a breakout role on “Black Rabbit.”
Jan 4, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings safety Harrison Smith (22) teammates greet him on the sideline against the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium.

NFL Coach and GM Cycle Bleeding Into Super Bowl Week

The Vikings fired GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah Friday.
exclusive
January 30, 2026

WNBA Union Leader Says CBA Talks Not ‘Constructive’

The sides have not met for a full bargaining session this year.
January 30, 2026

New UFL Investor Mike Repole Still Believes in Spring Football

Repole thinks recognizable coaches will draw NFL fans.
Sponsored

From Kobe Bryant to Tom Brady: Mike Repole’s Billion-Dollar Playbook

Mike Repole shares an inside look into building brands & working with star athletes.
Jan 17, 2026; Seattle, WA, USA; NFL Commissioner is Roger Goodell walks on the field prior to a game between the Seattle Seahawks and the San Francisco 49ers in an NFC Divisional Round game at Lumen Field.
exclusive
January 29, 2026

NFL Won’t Allow Prediction-Market Super Bowl Commercials

Prediction markets are everywhere. But they won’t be on the Super Bowl broadcast.
exclusive
January 29, 2026

League One Volleyball Hires Ex-Nike Exec As First Commissioner

Sandra Idehen takes over the women’s league this week.
January 27, 2026

Grand Slam Track Made Just $1.8M While Racking Up $40M in Debt

New filings show the most complete picture of the bankrupt league.
Dec 6, 2025; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA; Vancouver Whitecaps FC forward Brian White (24) controls the ball defended by Inter Miami defender Maximiliano Falcon (37) in the first half during the 2025 MLS Cup at Chase Stadium.
January 26, 2026

MLS Jumps Into Prediction Markets With Polymarket Deal

It joins the NHL in embracing the controversial prediction-market industry.