The Capital

Another inequity: COVID-19 testing

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Add COVID-19 testing to the difference­s between the women’s and men’s tournament­s that has coaches and players unhappy in Texas about what they say is a growing list of inequities.

The NCAA has run 8,015 tests through Sunday with only one confirmed positive at the women’s tournament using daily antigen testing. The men are using daily PCR tests, considered more accurate. A few false positives at the women’s tournament have been quickly retested using the PCR test.

Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer and Setsuko Ishiyama, the Cardinal’s director of women’s basketball, issued a statement Saturday night upset at “evidence of blatant sexism” that is “purposeful and hurtful” leaving them feeling betrayed by the NCAA.

“Women athletes and coaches are done waiting, not just for upgrades of a weight room, but for equity in every facet of life,” according to the statement. “Seeing men’s health valued at a higher level than that of women, as evidenced by different testing protocols at both tournament­s, is dishearten­ing.”

NCAA basketball administra­tors apologized Friday for the difference­s between the tournament­s and vowed to do better after photos went viral highlighti­ng the contrast between the women’s weight room and the men.

But Stanford asked university presidents and conference commission­ers for accountabi­lity.

“This cannot continue to be business as usual,” Stanford said in a statement on social media.

The NCAA followed recommenda­tions of its COVID-19 medical advisory group, collaborat­ed with the CDC and local medical authoritie­s at each location for testing requiremen­ts. The NCAA advisory group said either daily PCR or daily antigen testing were “equally effective models for basketball championsh­ips.”

The recommenda­tion was to adopt the testing approach that worked best with the provider and local health officials. The director of the San Antonio Metropolit­an Health District reviewed and approved using daily antigen tests and weekly PCR tests

The NCAA noted both men and women required either the daily antigen or PCR testing for seven straight days before arriving in Indianapol­is or San Antonio.

“It’s mind-blowing,” UConn guard Christyn Williams.

Vols avoid stunner: For two quarters, Middle Tennessee looked quick enough and bold enough to make a historic upset bid.

Tennessee’s size, speed and depth squashed any hope of that in a dominant second half.

Rennia Davis scored 24 points and had 14 boards and the No. 3 seed Lady Vols shut the door on No. 14 Middle Tennessee, pulling away for an 87-62 win Sunday in Austin, Texas, in the first round.

MTSU (17-8) and guard Anastasia Hayes looked like they could pull off a shocker early on when they were tied with the Lady Vols (17-7) at 39 at halftime. But their bid to become the first No. 14 seed to win an NCAA Tournament game was worn down against Tennessee’s superior size and length.

Layups: Moon Ursin scored a career-high 24 points, All-American NaLyssa Smith had a double-double (18 points, 10 boards) and No. 2 seed Baylor had no problem in its opener, cruising to a 101-52 win over No. 15 seed Jackson State in San Antonio. The Bears won their third national title in 2019, the last time the tournament was played . ... Jada Boyd scored 15 of her 18 points in the second half to help top-seeded NC State overcome a slow start and coast to a 79-58 win over 16 seed NC A&T in San Marcos, Texas.

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