It depends which championship you mean, because different sports and levels have very different typical point totals.

Here are a few useful reference points from recent and historical data.

College basketball (NCAA March Madness)

  • Recent men’s championship games usually land with combined scores in roughly the 130–160 total points range, often something like 72–65 or 75–68.
  • For bracket contests, many scoring systems give the championship pick the biggest weight; a very common setup is 1–2–4–8–16–32 points by round, where correctly picking the title winner is worth 32 points.
  • That means in a standard 63‑game bracket, there are 192 total possible points, with 32 of those tied to just that final game prediction.

Women’s college basketball benchmarks

  • A news list of “NCAA Championship Most Points” for women’s title games shows some huge single‑team totals, including 102 points by LSU in the 2023 championship, one of the highest-scoring title performances recorded.
  • Several other championship winners have scored in the 90s and high 80s (for example, Texas, UConn, Tennessee, South Carolina), underlining how offense-heavy some modern title games can be.

If you meant a specific championship

“Championship game” could be the CFP National Championship in football, the NBA Finals, the Super Bowl, the NCAA title, or even a video‑game league.

If you tell me:

  • The sport (basketball, football, etc.),
  • The level (college, pro, high school), and
  • The year or teams,

I can narrow it down to the exact point total or the typical scoring range used there.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.