"Documenting the season that changed women's basketball forever."
Full Court Press serves as a definitive historical record of the 2023-2024 NCAA women’s basketball season, a period marked by unprecedented viewership and cultural relevance. By following Caitlin Clark, Kamilla Cardoso, and Kiki Rice, the ESPN+ docuseries captured the transition of collegiate icons into professional titans. Produced by Omaha Productions, the series moved beyond standard highlights to document the personal pressures of fame. It arrived at the exact moment when women’s sports moved from the periphery to a central pillar of the American sports landscape. The series preserves the grit and ambition of athletes who redefined their sport's economy. For future historians, this work remains the primary document of a revolution in athletic media, showcasing the specific gravity of a transformative era in basketball history.
| Watched? | # | Air Date | Episode Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | May 03, 2025 | 1. Too Much Greatness | |
| E2 | May 03, 2025 | 2. Rivalries and Roots | |
| E3 | May 10, 2025 | 3. Through the Fire | |
| E4 | May 10, 2025 | 4. Rebound Season |
Production Type: Limited Docuseries
Full Court Press (2024) is a standalone Limited Docuseries that concluded its 4-episode run in May 2024. Produced by Omaha Productions and Words & Pictures in collaboration with ESPN+, the series was conceived as a high-access look into the 2023-2024 women's college basketball season. The production scale involved following three of the sport's most influential athletes—Caitlin Clark, Kamilla Cardoso, and Kiki Rice—across multiple months of high-stakes competition and personal development.
The story was designed with a definitive conclusion because it chronicles a specific, unrepeatable historical window in collegiate athletics. By documenting the journey through the NCAA tournament and the transition of the stars toward the professional ranks, the series captures a complete narrative arc of a record-breaking season. As a documentary project focused on the unique circumstances of the 2024 collegiate year, the production serves as a finite historical record rather than an ongoing episodic venture.