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NCAA's Treatment of Women
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<blockquote data-quote="RonJohn" data-source="post: 791470" data-attributes="member: 2426"><p>I said they have to be treated the same, not that they have to spend the same dollar for dollar.</p><p></p><p>Is it OK to have the tournament in different cities? I see no reason why not. If it wasn't for COVID, I would rather spend a few weeks in San Antonio than in Indianapolis. During COVID, I don't think location even really matters. If you travel from the hotel directly to a gym and then directly back to the hotel, it doesn't really matter what is between those two locations.</p><p></p><p>Is it OK for ESPN to pay much less for TV rights for the women's tournament than CBS pays for the men's? It is a free market. I'm sure the NCAA would love to be able to force networks to pay $1billion for every tournament they run, but they won't get it.</p><p></p><p>You have agreed that the NCAA has failed on multiple counts to reach minimum standards for the women's tournament. I think the biggest failure is in management and administration. The NCAA is showing that they are a business mainly concerned about profit, instead of a non-profit that promotes "Youth/amateur sports competition". The NCAA is not only a non-profit, they are a 501(c)(3) organization. The stated purpose of the NCAA is:</p><p></p><p>Are they doing that for all NCAA student athletes, or only select ones? I am not saying that it would be successful, but a lesser treated athlete, such as a women's basketball player, could file a complaint with the IRS and try to have their 501(c)(3) status removed. There have been athletes who have attempted to have the NCAA declared a monopoly, and the NCAA has been fighting to get an antitrust exemption passed into law. It is ridiculous that the NCAA has allowed the lack of "minimum standards" for women with all of the other potential legal issues that they are facing. The NCAA has a large range of issues that they are facing: Antitrust, gender issues, enforcement issues, amateur status issues, etc.: And yet, they fumble on every single one of those issues and don't appear to have any idea about what they should be doing. If they would stick to their stated purpose, then they would be in much better shape. They appear to be flapping around with no discernable purpose.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RonJohn, post: 791470, member: 2426"] I said they have to be treated the same, not that they have to spend the same dollar for dollar. Is it OK to have the tournament in different cities? I see no reason why not. If it wasn't for COVID, I would rather spend a few weeks in San Antonio than in Indianapolis. During COVID, I don't think location even really matters. If you travel from the hotel directly to a gym and then directly back to the hotel, it doesn't really matter what is between those two locations. Is it OK for ESPN to pay much less for TV rights for the women's tournament than CBS pays for the men's? It is a free market. I'm sure the NCAA would love to be able to force networks to pay $1billion for every tournament they run, but they won't get it. You have agreed that the NCAA has failed on multiple counts to reach minimum standards for the women's tournament. I think the biggest failure is in management and administration. The NCAA is showing that they are a business mainly concerned about profit, instead of a non-profit that promotes "Youth/amateur sports competition". The NCAA is not only a non-profit, they are a 501(c)(3) organization. The stated purpose of the NCAA is: Are they doing that for all NCAA student athletes, or only select ones? I am not saying that it would be successful, but a lesser treated athlete, such as a women's basketball player, could file a complaint with the IRS and try to have their 501(c)(3) status removed. There have been athletes who have attempted to have the NCAA declared a monopoly, and the NCAA has been fighting to get an antitrust exemption passed into law. It is ridiculous that the NCAA has allowed the lack of "minimum standards" for women with all of the other potential legal issues that they are facing. The NCAA has a large range of issues that they are facing: Antitrust, gender issues, enforcement issues, amateur status issues, etc.: And yet, they fumble on every single one of those issues and don't appear to have any idea about what they should be doing. If they would stick to their stated purpose, then they would be in much better shape. They appear to be flapping around with no discernable purpose. [/QUOTE]
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