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ITF unveils new research examining sports gender equality

ITF unveils new research examining sports gender equality
April 13, 2021

The International Tennis Federation has today unveiled the results of a first-of-its-kind global research project examining sports gender equality across the media and social media.

Conducted and delivered by Ipsos MORI, the research explored how the representation of male and female athletes varies, identifying key differences by market and media type, as well as any differences in consumer searches between male and female players.

The report found that the conversation and coverage of men's tennis is more focused on the sport, with a strong combative narrative and a sense of history, elite competition and achievement.  Conversely, the conversation around women's tennis is less intense and relatively more focused on life off court, from health and age to family.

Key findings from the global data include:

  • Women’s tennis content is twice as likely to reference a player’s age 
  • Men’s tennis content is twice as likely to refer to ‘battle’ terminology 
  • Men’s content is 70% more likely to mention a player’s physical prowess
  • G.O.A.T was mentioned 50% more in men’s tennis content than women’s
  • There were 40% more references to ‘making history’ in men’s tennis content
  • Women’s tennis is over two times more likely to mention health and medical treatment
  • Women’s content is 30% more likely to refer to players’ family 
  • ‘Career’ is mentioned nearly 50% more in women’s coverage than men’s coverage. 

Although very rare, comprising less than 0.5% of online content, the research also found:

  • Women’s content is nearly twice as likely to mention clothing vs men’s content
  • There were 11x more mentions of skin colour in women’s tennis
  • There were 3x as many mentions of BLM in women’s tennis 

Looking at relative differences in content by channel reveals how the mainstream media is driving these differences. The research also shows very few differences in top search terms and search questions around male and female tennis players. Despite this, Google search results proved to be unbalanced: only 6 out of 50 search results are women if you Google “top 50 tennis players”. 

Commenting on the findings ITF President David Haggerty notes "Voice is one of the key pillars of our Advantage All strategy. To make a positive impact in this area, it is vital that we have a credible understanding of media and social media language.

“The results reveal that, despite similar public appetite across both men's and women's tennis, there is a distinct difference in the narrative surrounding them. It's important to acknowledge that this difference is not necessarily always negative, but we must avoid a situation where a different focus arises as a result of conscious or unconscious bias, as ultimately that can diminish the sporting achievements of female athletes."

Technical Note on the Research:
All data retrieved from publicly available content sourced via the Social Listening platform Synthesio for Global English, Spain and France. Data also sourced by local vendors for China. Data retrieved w/c 1st March 2021 and covers the full calendar years of 2020 and 2019, except China where data retrieved is for 2019 only. Data was collected in local language and English for each country and translated to English before analysis.

Content was retrieved on the basis of it containing mention of a top-100 ranked athlete's name and reference to their sport. Comparative analysis between male and female athletes was undertaken on a sample of 25,000 online posts per gender, per sport, per year, per language/country. The sample represented the full dataset in terms of media channel split. All relative differences between male and female players are statistically significant at the 99% confidence interval.

Search analysis was conducted using Google, incognito.

A more detailed overview of the findings can be read here.

 

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