INDIANAPOLIS — Dr. Ryan Brewer is a renowned valuation guru in the field of finance. He is an expert on estimating something or someone’s worth. His professional opinion is so revered that he has been called on to testify in court as a valuation expert, including cases involving sports property.
In his research, he has crunched the numbers, one way or another, for just about every major sports league. He has delved into college and youth sports, too.
But when IndyStar asked Brewer to put a price tag on Caitlin Clark — what she has meant financially to the WNBA, her city and the country in her rookie season with the Indiana Fever — the numbers were so shocking that Brewer was sure he must have made some mistake.
He ran the numbers again. Then again. And every single time, he got the same result.
“The numbers are so staggering,” said Brewer, associate professor of finance at Indiana University Columbus. “They don’t even seem real.”
By Brewer’s calculation, Clark is responsible for 26.5% of the WNBA’s leaguewide activity for the 2024 season, including attendance, merchandise sales and television. One of every six tickets sold at a WNBA arena can be attributed to Clark.
Total TV viewership due to Clark is up 300% and 45% of total broadcast value came from Fever games. The league’s merchandise sales catapulted 500%, with Clark ranking No. 1 followed by the Chicago Sky’s Angel Reese, another rookie.
The Fever’s regular-season game attendance averaged more than 17,000 fans, the first time a WNBA team has drawn more than 300,000 fans in a season. Clark’s regular-season games were watched by 1.2 million viewers on average, which was 199% more than non-Clark WNBA games.
But, perhaps, the most astonishing number of all is Clark’s economic impact on the city of Indianapolis, which Brewer says is upwards of $36 million. Not as big as the NBA All-Star game’s $400 million financial boost to the city in February, but a respectable 10% of that.
“Now, let’s take a breath for a minute and think about this,” said Brewer. “That’s for one year. We’re talking about one player.”
One player who came into a league that had slowly been growing and ignited a firestorm of popularity. A player who was paid an annual salary of $76,535, a fraction of what she made for her league. A player whose male rookie counterpart Victor Wembanyama was paid $13.8 million his first season in the NBA, a whopping 184 times more than Clark.
All of it begs the question — a complicated, multilayered question that involves lessons in business, marketing, risks, rewards and economic impact. Will Clark ever be paid by the WNBA what she’s really worth to the league?