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Georgia Tech coach blasts NCAA for treating women's basketball as "an afterthought"

Former NCAA coach discusses equality in sports
Former NCAA Coach Muffet McGraw on fighting for gender equality in sports, enacting change 04:47

Georgia Tech women's basketball coach Nell Fortner slammed the NCAA's "disparities" between the men's and women's basketball tournaments in a powerful social media post Tuesday. 

COLLEGE BASKETBALL: JAN 09 Women's Georgia Tech at Florida State
Nell Fortner, head women's basketball coach Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, in a 2020 file photo. David Allio/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Before No. 5-seed Georgia Tech's 73-56 win over No. 4-seed West Virginia to reach the Sweet 16, she fired off a statement criticizing the NCAA. 

"Thank you for using the three biggest weeks of your organization's year to expose exactly how you feel about women's basketball — an afterthought," she said. "Thank you for showing off the disparities between the men's and women's tournament that are on full display in San Antonio. From COVID testing, to lack of weight training facilities, to game floors that hardly tell anyone that it's the NCAA Tournament and many more." 

"These disparities are just a snapshot of larger, more pervasive issues when it comes to women's sports and the NCAA. Shipping in a few racks of weights, after the fact, is not an answer. It's a band-aid and an afterthought," she added. 

"In what other non-profit educational endeavor is it acceptable to treat young women as a less valuable financial commodity?" Fortner added. 

The former U.S. women's national basketball team coach also said that while the TV contract airing the women's basketball tournament games doesn't generate billions, it's "a package worth half a billion." 

"We are a valuable asset that has consistently earned half the right to be marketed, promoted and conducted as a great championship rather than an afterthought," Fortner said.

Her remarks come days after the NCAA apologized for their "shortcomings," which was prompted by photos and videos exposing the stark differences between the men's and women's facilities. Additionally, some coaches, including Connecticut's Geno Auriemma and Stanford's Tara VanDerveer, pointed out how women's teams are tested COVID-19 differently – they receive daily antigen tests while the men's teams get daily PCR tests. The latter is considered the gold standard in detecting the virus. 

Fans and coaches also pointed out the courts where the women's basketball teams are playing don't have the trademark "March Madness" phrase that the NCAA uses to promote the games. The courts' center logo only say "Women's Basketball." 

South Dakota v Oregon
Sedona Prince #32 of the Oregon Ducks and Macy Guebert #3 of the South Dakota Coyotes tip off in the first round game of the 2021 NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at the Alamodome on March 22, 2021, in San Antonio, Texas. Getty Images

In a call with administrators Friday, NCAA Senior Basketball VP Dan Gavitt said the organization would do better in addressing the disparities between their men and women's leagues.

Former Notre Dame women's basketball coach Muffet McGraw also criticized the NCAA and talked about the fight for gender equality on "CBS This Morning" on Tuesday. 

"I think that similar to what most women across the country, whatever field you're in has gone through, we're treated with the the kind of feeling that we're just not enough, that we're somehow less than," she said. "And they think it's okay. And that's probably the biggest problem that they think it's okay." 

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