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NCAA's Treatment of Women
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<blockquote data-quote="Deleted member 2897" data-source="post: 791246"><p>100%. All of these continue to be good points.</p><p></p><p>Not to put words in Liberty's mouth (but I am <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🤪" title="Zany face :zany_face:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.6/png/unicode/64/1f92a.png" data-shortname=":zany_face:" />), but that's not all Nell posted about. She asked in what other endeavor would it be acceptable to give women inferior resources because of their perceived cash value? Well, compared to the men, she's paid significantly less, so is her staff, her recruiting budget is smaller too, and their other resources are inferior. So I'd say that's her answer.</p><p></p><p>She and all of us are pretty much unanimous that there has to be some minimum standard for accommodations for the women's tournament and that the NCAA failed. It looked/looks like empty high school gyms and convention ballrooms. Women's basketball is a money losing venture. We all give them the short end of the stick as described in the previous paragraph. But I guess we're okay giving them much less resources because at least our minimum at Georgia Tech meets their minimum standards when the tournament didn't. Maybe that's the conclusion on all this. Just interested to see when Cabrera says we all need to do better what he has in mind for himself and Georgia Tech. My guess is nothing, but maybe I'm wrong.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deleted member 2897, post: 791246"] 100%. All of these continue to be good points. Not to put words in Liberty's mouth (but I am 🤪), but that's not all Nell posted about. She asked in what other endeavor would it be acceptable to give women inferior resources because of their perceived cash value? Well, compared to the men, she's paid significantly less, so is her staff, her recruiting budget is smaller too, and their other resources are inferior. So I'd say that's her answer. She and all of us are pretty much unanimous that there has to be some minimum standard for accommodations for the women's tournament and that the NCAA failed. It looked/looks like empty high school gyms and convention ballrooms. Women's basketball is a money losing venture. We all give them the short end of the stick as described in the previous paragraph. But I guess we're okay giving them much less resources because at least our minimum at Georgia Tech meets their minimum standards when the tournament didn't. Maybe that's the conclusion on all this. Just interested to see when Cabrera says we all need to do better what he has in mind for himself and Georgia Tech. My guess is nothing, but maybe I'm wrong. [/QUOTE]
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