Connecticut Post

NCAA women’s tournament expands to 68 teams

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The NCAA women’s basketball tournament is expanding to 68 teams beginning with the current season, giving it an equal number of participan­ts as the men’s tournament as part of a concerted effort at gender parity.

The men’s tournament expanded to 68 teams in 2011 with four first-round games traditiona­lly played in Dayton, Ohio. The first four for the women’s tournament will take place on the campuses of teams seeded in the top 16 this season, but they will move to a tobe-determined neutral site beginning with the 2023 tournament.

“This immediate expansion of the women’s basketball championsh­ip reinforces the fact that leaders within Division I are committed to strengthen­ing aspects of the women’s basketball championsh­ip that directly impact student-athletes,” said West Virginia athletic director Shane Lyons, the chairman of the Division I Council.

“We look forward to the positive change this will have for the student experience at the championsh­ip,“Lyons said, “especially as it relates to equal team opportunit­ies to compete in the tournament.”

The expansion of the women’s tournament was among the recommenda­tions put forth in August after a comprehens­ive external gender equity review conducted by the law firm Kaplan Hecker & Fink. It was commission­ed after backlash driven by social media of disparitie­s in the men’s and women’s tournament­s, including weight rooms and other facilities.

ESPN will broadcast the first four games along with the rest of the women’s tournament.

“The expanded bracket and championsh­ip opportunit­ies for Division I women’s basketball studentath­letes are paramount,” said UT-San Antonio athletic director Lisa Campos, the chair of the Division I Women’s Basketball Oversight Committee.

“This is a transition year for the tournament, and strong considerat­ion will be given for other improvemen­t areas, including opening-round games taking place at a predetermi­ned site, in order to improve the championsh­ip experience.”

Other recommenda­tions include exploring a joint Final Four with the semifinals and title games held in the same city on the same weekend, though that would not happen until at least 2027 with sites already locked in until that point.

The NCAA already had approved the women’s tournament using the phrase March Madness in its branding.

“This action corrects an inequity that has existed between the men’s and women’s championsh­ips for a decade,“Danielle Donehew, executive director of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Associatio­n, said about tournament expansion, “and provides equitable postseason participat­ion opportunit­ies for Division I men’s and women’s basketball student-athletes.”

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