PHOENIX β When you walk into Title 9 Sports Grill in Phoenix's Melrose District, its mission to be a haven for watching women's sports permeates every nook and cranny. From the over dozen TVs mounted on pink and orange walls to the βPlay Like a Girl!β neon sign against a giant image of retired WNBA star Diana Taurasi.
It's an impressive turnaround for co-owners Audrey Corley and Kat Moore. Just before Christmas, the space was still Moore and her husband Brad's hot dog restaurant. But last summer they sold the business and the new owners didn't want to stay in the property. That's when Corley, who owns a popular lesbian bar on the next block, proposed partnering on the city's first women's sports-centric bar. She had been mulling the idea since reading about the Sports Bra in Portland, Oregon, which opened in 2022, and then seeing a half-dozen similar bars emerge in the last year.
βThen I see, you know, another one popped up here and another one. And then I was like, itβs just time. It has to be,β Corley said before Title 9's grand opening earlier this month.
Several new bars dedicated to women's sports have made the mad dash to open in time to capitalize on March Madness, now in full swing. From San Francisco to Cleveland, there will be more than a dozen across the country before the year is over. The femme-focused bar scene has made huge strides from three years ago when The Sports Bra was the only one. It comes during an exciting first year during which teams in the women's bracket will finally be paid for playing in the NCAA tourney. Many credit stars like Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese for increasing the marketability of female players.
Last season, Reese and Clark's teams never saw a dollar. Now, the women's teams will finally earn individual revenue, known as βunits.β A unit is money paid to conferences when one of its teams appears in the NCAA Tournament. Teams earn another with every game played.

Patrons cheer during the selection show for the NCAA women's college basketball tournament in The 99ers on March 16 in Denver.
The most seamless part of transforming her old restaurant into Title 9 has been the built-in community anticipation of having a place to view women's sports, Moore said.
"The only question Iβve gotten from quite a few men, especially when we first started telling people, was, βAre men allowed?β Yeah!β Moore said, with a chuckle.
Named for the landmark 1972 law that forbids discrimination based on sex in education, including athletics, Title 9 is filled with tributes to female athletes, from framed photos with QR codes to a cocktail roster with drinks such as the Pat Summitt Sour and Taurasi Goat-Tail. However, the owners emphasize a family-friendly atmosphere where young girls can come celebrate after a school game.
βEven some of the little girls, they could come here and dream of being on the TV someday and actually getting paid for it,β Corley said.
Debra Hallum and Marlene du Plessis were also inspired by the Sports Bra. They made their targeted opening in Austin last week of 1972 ATX Women's Sports Pub across from the University of Texas campus. The day included a rainbow ribbon cutting and officials from the Austin LGBT Chamber of Commerce.

A mural of a woman's basketball game is displayed inside the Title 9 Sports Grill on March 16 in Phoenix.
While they are in a conservative state, the women have been emphasizing the barβs LGBTQ-friendliness.
βWe want to be very clear that we will be a very welcoming and inclusive space for all women sports fans,β Hallum said. βWe want to invite everyone to grow the interest and the viewership, because thatβs the only way weβre going to fix that gap for women, including the pay gap.β
Neither woman has hospitality experience. Hallum has a corporate background and du Plessis' is in education. But, they researched running a business like this and hired a talented chef and staff. It's clear both are passionate.
βIt is so hard to find a bar or a pub that will show womenβs sports,β du Plessis said. βYou always have to call around, ask around to find where they going to show it. And then most of the time you know they will not have the sound on. And we will.β
They've been touched by the reactions from residents, even parents of boys.
βWe had a mom and dad, two daughters and their son show up and (the mom) was all about, 'This is exactly what we need,ββ Hallum said. βWe want our son to be raised knowing that this is just as great and just as wonderful as menβs sports.β

Patrons attend the grand opening of the Title 9 Sports Grill on March 16 in Phoenix.
In Denver, Annie Weaver and Miranda Spencer met playing on opposing flag football teams. A month later, they began drafting a business plan for a similar concept, also inspired by The Sports Bra. Open since December, the 99ers Sports Bar is now hosting its first March Madness crowds.
They were first mulling a name that would play off of Mia Hamm, the 1990s soccer icon who inspired Weaverβs Halloween costume for years. They settled on a name that honors the 1999 U.S. Women's World Cup soccer team, filled with names and faces that didn't get as much attention as Hamm.
On a recent Sunday, the bar was standing room only as the TVs aired an NWSL game, Unrivaled semifinal games, and the Selection Sunday broadcast announcing the brackets for the NCAA Tournament.
The city doesnβt even have any womenβs teams in the major national leagues, but it was recently awarded the 16th NWSL expansion team, to begin play in 2026.
A tri-fold bracket covered one table, and an impromptu friendship bracelet-making station occupied another.
βI wish I would have had this space growing up,β Spencer said.
These new bar operators agree this is not a trend but an indicator of a market that hasn't been served. But hopefully, anyone looking to open a women's sports bar isn't doing it βjust to be trendy,β said Moore, of Title 9.
Corley's most important advice for any would-be barkeep: "The same way you play sports for the love, open this up for the love.β
Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, and other athletes who are raising the sponsorship bar in women's sports this year
Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, and other athletes who are raising the sponsorship bar in women's sports this year
Updated
In a year where two of the most prominent leagues for women's sports shattered attendance and viewership records, the brightest stars are cultivating burgeoning audiences on social mediaβaudiences that those players can now leverage for lucrative sponsorship deals as early as their college years.
Collabstr analyzed data from SponsorUnited to rank the athletes in women's sports whose social followings grew across all platforms the most over the last year. The report analyzes social media engagement on Instagram, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and Facebook from January 2023 through February 2024. Overall, the athletes tracked by SponsorUnited shared more branded posts on Instagram than any other social platform.
The boom in audiences and the easing of name, image, and likeness rules to allow college athletes to accept sponsorships have made collegiate and professional athletes a hot commodity for brands looking to get their names in front of their fans. Sponsorship deals for women in the top five professional sports leagues grew 10.5% on average over the year, according to SponsorUnited.
A couple of the athletes who have racked up the largest audience gains on social media have transitioned from collegiate to professional leagues this year, carrying more eyeballs into leagues that have historically lagged behind men's leagues in public interest and sponsorship dollars.
Superstar rookies Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark both clocked some of the largest social media following gains over the year ahead of making their debuts in the Women's National Basketball Association. The star power of players like these has the attention of those at the topmost rungs of the organization.
"I think fans are finally knowing where to find us," WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a news conference prior to the July All-Star Game tipoff. "And I think this rookie class has brought a lot of attention and is lifting all of our games and all of our players."
Reese and Clark are just a few of the young, talented athletes in women's sports whose fan bases have been shifting from television to social media apps over the past yearβand translating into high-paying sponsorship deals.
10. Deja Kelly
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 450,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 22
Deja Kelly played NCAA college basketball for the North Carolina Tar Heels for four seasons and transferred to Oregon this year. Her star power on the court has earned her sponsorships from Dunkin' Donuts and Tommy Hilfiger, where she was the first college athlete to sign a deal with the clothing brand. In July, she was invited to the White House for a celebration of Black women in sports.
9. Hailey Van Lith
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 500,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 22
Hailey Van Lith now plays for the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs, but previously played guard for the Louisiana State University Tigers women's NCAA basketball team for three seasons. She has more than a million followers on Instagram and over 400,000 on TikTok, NIL deals worth nearly $700,000, and she has collaborated with Apple in social media posts this year.
8. Michelle Wie West
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 600,000
League: Ladies Professional Golf Association
Age: 34
Now-retired professional golfer Michelle Wie West is no newcomer to the professional sports scene and the top-dollar deals that come with it. At age 10 she became the youngest person to earn a spot in the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links and was the youngest person to qualify for an LPGA event in 2003.
Wie West blogs about food under the cleverly named handle @whatdowieeat. She also has a designer line of jewelry with e-commerce jewelry brand Wove, which fans have spotted on Taylor Swift. Wie West has notched sponsorships from Nike and others over the years and is now involved in investing and entrepreneurship.
7. Kelley O'Hara
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 750,000
League: National Women's Soccer League
Age: 36
Kelley O'Hara plays defender for the U.S. National Women's Soccer team and New York and New Jersey's Gotham FC. The Olympic gold medalist and two-time Women's World Cup champion announced her retirement in May of this year. Her final regular season with the NWSL will end in November. She was one of the first female athletes ever sponsored by athletic wear icon Under Armour.
6. Caitlin Clark
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 900,000
League: WNBA
Age: 22
WNBA rookie Caitlin Clark may be one of the most talked-about athletes in the world. Her mere presence on the court has translated to broadcast viewership growth for both the NCAA and WNBA.
While at the University of Iowa, she had the fourth-largest NIL deal size among all eligible college athletes at $3.1 million and the most sponsorship deals of any other woman in NCAA basketball. Earlier this year, she inked an eight-year, $28 million deal with highly coveted sponsor Nike that far surpasses her annual salary of $76,000 from the Indiana Fever.
5. Jordyn Huitema
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 1,100,000
League: National Women's Soccer League
Age: 23
Jordyn Huitema is another one of the several National Women's Soccer League players to make the top 10 ranking for social following growth in the past year. Huitema plays forward for the Seattle Reign as well as the Canada Women's National Soccer Team. Huitema has 1.4 million followers on Instagram and another 1.3 million on TikTok where she shared a brand sponsorship with New Balance earlier this year.
4. Kerolin Nicoli
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,900,000
League: National Women's Soccer League
Age: 24
Brazilian native Kerolin Nicoli plays forward in the National Women's Soccer League for the North Carolina Courage. The athlete was a member of the Brazilian women's team in the 2024 Paris Olympics. She was named league MVP in 2023.
3. Flau'jae Johnson
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,300,000
League: NCAA Basketball
Age: 20
Rapper and NCAA basketball star Flau'jae Johnson recently released an album inspired by her unique life as a performer and basketball player. The now-WNBA rookie went by the nickname "Bayou Barbie" in her previous role on the LSU women's NCAA basketball team, but was unable to trademark it due to Mattel's rights around the Barbie name.
The rising star's business sense and growing personal brand are apparent in her estimated $1.2 million in sponsorship deals with companies like Powerade and Amazon.
2. Olivia Dunne
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 2,400,000
League: NCAA Gymnastics
Age: 21
Olivia Dunne, better known as Livvy Dunne, is an American college gymnast who boasts a following of more than 13 million combined across Instagram and TikTok, where she shares brand-sponsored posts backed by athleisure brand Vuori and others. Dunne was thrust into virality last summer when TikTok user @h00pify shared a video about how she was "rizzed" up by Baby Gronk, which captured the world's attention for weeks.
Now competing for Louisiana State University in NCAA gymnastics while pursuing a communications degree, she notched a Southeastern Conference championship win for the Tigers in the 2023-2024 season.
1. Angel Reese
Updated
Follower growth 2023-2024: 5,300,000
League: WNBA
Age: 22
She's only in her first year with the WNBA, and Angel Reese already finds herself on 98.9% of fantasy WNBA rosters in ESPN's fantasy women's basketball. The 6'3" power forward for the Chicago Sky made the WNBA All-Star team as a rookie. She's racked up sponsorship deals with PlayStation, Wingstop, Coach, Amazon, and others.
Story editing by Carren Jao. Additional editing by Kelly Glass. Copy editing by Kristen Wegrzyn. Photo selection by Clarese Moller.
This story originally appeared on Collabstr and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.