The NCAA is exploring holding a joint Final Four with the men and women's basketball tournaments holding their semifinals and title games in the same city on the same weekend, though it would not happen until at least 2027 with sites already locked in through 2026.
Combining the tournaments was one of the recommendations stemming from an external review of gender equity issues of the tournaments. The report released in August was sparked by outrage at the disparities between amenities at the two tourneys, including weight rooms and other features.
The NCAA earlier this week said the womenās tournament can start using āMarch Madnessā in marketing and branding beginning this season, addressing another sharp criticism raised this year.
A combined Final Four is likely to be more controversial and the idea does not have universal support. But the NCAA said Thursday it will look into the details.
āWe are committed to continuing discussion about the concept of conducting both the Womenās and Menās Final Fours in the same city in the next bid cycle for each of these premier NCAA Championships,ā said Nina King, chair of the Division I Womenās Basketball Committee. āFinding ways to address the gender equity issues that have come to exist through the years between the Division I Womenās and Menās Basketball Championships is a priority, and we are dedicated to making impactful changes.ā
Tom Burnett, chair of the Division I Menās Basketball Committee, said the committee meetings have been productive.
āIf both committees agree that the recommendation of having both Final Fours in the same city is the best option, we are committed to seeing that it will be executed with comprehensive planning,ā he said.
Coaches are split on the idea. The Womenās Basketball Coaches Association did a survey of its coaches last month on the recommendations in the report and only 55% were in favor of a combined Final Four. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the survey results, which included participation from 345 of 356 WBCA members.
Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said she supported exploring the idea if it is done correctly.
āIf they have the hotels correctly with both number one seeds staying in the same place and the facilities right, I think it's doable,ā she said. āI donāt think you could say youāre going to do it and not work at it. You have to iron out the details.ā
VanDerveer also said she has no issue if the women's Final Four is played in a basketball arena in the city while the men's game is played in a much larger dome.
āI think we should recognize that the sports are in two different places,ā she said. āDo whatās best for growing womenās basketball. Womenās basketball is not where menās basketball is because we started later and havenāt been promoted as heavily. We have catching up to do. Youāre in an 18-20,000 seat arena we can fill it up. I donāt know weāre selling out the dome yet.ā
Most of the other ideas suggested by the report had over 90% approval from the coaches in the WBCA survey.
Last season, because of the coronavirus pandemic, the entire women's tournament was played at a neutral site in the San Antonio arena. The men's tourney was played entirely in Indiana. The NCAA faced a backlash as players called out disparities on social media and later apologized before launching a review.
In normal years, the menās tournament is played entirely at neutral sites across the country while the top 16 women's seeds host the opening two rounds before shifting to neutral venues. This yearās womenās Final Four is in Minneapolis and the Final Fours from 2027-31 for both tournaments will be announced next fall.
The NCAA also announced Wednesday that the national office will start from scratch in determining budgeting expenses for the two tournament staffs instead of adjusting the budgets from the previous fiscal year. This move will help show where differences occur and potentially increase chances for equitable spending and cross-promotion.
WBCA Executive Director Danielle Donehew said it was encouraging āto see real movement by the NCAA in addressing the gender equity concerns.ā
āWe look forward to many more such announcements in the weeks and months ahead,ā she said.
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