Home

TTR News Center

Following criticism, NCAA upgrades weight room for women's basketball players

No Comments Sports News

taka4332/iStockBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Following criticism over the disparity between men’s and women’s training facilities during March Madness, the NCAA revealed an upgraded weight room Saturday for female basketball players competing in the Division I tournament.

“The weight room has arrived!” the NCAA Women’s Basketball account tweeted Saturday afternoon. “Let’s gooooo.”

NCAA officials apologized Friday after images and video surfaced on social media this week showing the stark differences between the women’s and men’s weight room facilities in Texas and Indiana, respectively.

The women’s tournament weight room appeared to consist of a single set of dumbbells and some yoga mats, while the men’s more-lavish tournament weight room was stocked with rows of weights and training equipment.

Lynn Holzman, the NCAA’s vice president of women’s basketball, promised to have improvements in place by Saturday morning.

“We fell short this year,” Holzman said during a press briefing Friday.

“I’ve experienced when you don’t have something that’s the same,” said Holzman, a former college basketball player. “This is also why it hit such a nerve with me. … There’s an accountability aspect as the conversation moves forward that is front of mind.”

The new weight room, located inside the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio, features more weights, as well as socially distanced squat racks, resistance bands and exercise balls. Areas near the center’s practice courts also have exercise bikes, treadmills, rowing machines and other equipment.

University of Oregon forward Sedona Prince, who helped spotlight the disparity in the weight rooms in a viral social media video, posted an update from the new facility Saturday afternoon.

“Guess what guys? We got a weight room, yeah!” Prince said in a TikTok video that included several of her teammates cheering. “Thank you NCAA for listening to us.”

Some of the new equipment was already ordered or was going to be assembled just for the Sweet 16 teams, according to ESPN. NCAA officials also accepted equipment offers from companies made over social media, ESPN reported.

The weight room controversy has touched on larger issues of inequality in women’s college basketball, from the difference in the number of Division I teams that compete in the women’s (64) versus the men’s (68) tournaments, to social media branding that focuses on the men’s games.

“Women’s basketball is a popular sport whose stock and presence continues to rise on a global level,” South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley said in a statement Friday night. “[It is time] for the NCAA leadership to reevaluate the value they place on women.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Tokyo 2020 Committee: no fan's at Olympic Games

No Comments Sports News

 

Justin Setterfield/Getty ImagesBY: LEIGHTON SCHNEIDER, ABC NEWS
(TOKYO) — There will be no foreign fans at the Tokyo Olympics this summer after Japan decided to not allow overseas’s spectators entry into the country, according to a press release from Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee.
The decision was announced on Saturday following a virtual meeting between the International Olympic Committee, International Paralympic Committee, Tokyo Metropolitan Government, the Organising Committee Tokyo 2020, and the government of Japan. The Japanese parties cited the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic across the world, the emergence of new variants of the virus, and restricted international travel as the reasoning.
“In order to give clarity to ticket holders living overseas and to enable them to adjust their travel plans at this stage, the parties on the Japanese side have come to the conclusion that they will not be able to enter into Japan at the time of the Olympic and Paralympic Games,” the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee said in a statement. 
The IOC and IPC respected and accepted this conclusion during Saturday’s meeting. 
Spectators who purchased tickets will be refunded. Ticketholders will be informed soon about getting the refund. 
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 3/19/21

No Comments Sports News

iStockBY: ABC NEWS

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from yesterday’s games:

   ——

   NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

 Final  Sacramento    107  Boston     96

 Final  San Antonio   116  Cleveland  110

 Final  Orlando       121  Brooklyn   113

 Final  Detroit       113  Houston    100

 Final  Indiana       137  Miami      110

 Final  Golden State  116  Memphis    103

 Final  Utah          115  Toronto    112

  Final OT  Denver        131  Chicago    127

 Final  Portland      125  Dallas     119

 Final  Phoenix       113  Minnesota  101

   ——

   NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

 Final  Washington   2  N-Y Rangers   1

 Final  Calgary      4  Toronto       3

  Final OT  Vancouver    3  Montreal      2

  Final SO  St. Louis    2  San Jose      1

 Final  Vegas        4  Los Angeles   2

   ——

   TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL

 Final  (2)Illinois         78  Drexel             49

 Final  (3)Baylor           79  Hartford           55

 Final  (6)Houston          87  Cleveland St.      56

 Final  Oral Roberts        75  (7)Ohio St.        72

 Final  (10)Arkansas        85  Colgate            68

 Final  (11)Oklahoma St.    69  Liberty            60

 Final  (13)West Virginia   84  Morehead St.       67

 Final  Syracuse            78  (16)San Diego St.  62

 Final  (17)Loyola Chicago  71  Georgia Tech       60

 Final  (18)Villanova       73  Winthrop           63

 Final  North Texas         78  (20)Purdue         69

 Final  (21)Texas Tech      65  Utah St.           53

 Final  Florida             75  (25)Virginia Tech  70

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

NCAA apologizes to women's basketball players for weight room disparity

No Comments Sports News

matimax/iStockBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — NCAA officials apologized for “dropping the ball” after providing women’s basketball players with training facilities inferior to men’s during the Division 1 tournaments.

“We fell short this year in what we’ve been doing to prepare in the last 60 days for 64 for teams to be here in San Antonio, and we acknowledge that,” Lynn Holzman, the NCAA’s vice president of women’s basketball, said during a press briefing Friday, after images and video surfaced on social media showing the stark differences between the women’s and men’s weight room facilities in Texas and Indiana, respectively.

The apology comes after University of Oregon forward Sedona Prince posted a video Thursday night of the women’s tournament weight room, which consisted of a single set of dumbbells. The video then showed what she said was the men’s tournament weight room, which was stocked with rows of weights and training equipment.

“If you’re not upset about this problem, then you are a part of it,” Prince said.

Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry retweeted the viral video, saying, “Come on now!”

Ali Kershner, a sports performance coach at Stanford University, also posted images to Instagram Thursday contrasting the women’s sparse weight room to the men’s more lavish one in Indianapolis.

“This needs to be addressed. These women want and deserve to be given the same opportunities,” Kershner said. “In a year defined by a fight for equality this is a chance to have a conversation and get better.”

In an initial statement Thursday evening, Holzman said limited space in the tournament bubble was a factor in the amenities available.

On Friday, Holzman said the NCAA was “actively working” on addressing the women’s facilities, promising that improvements would be in place by Saturday morning.

Dan Gavitt, senior vice president of basketball for the NCAA, took the blame for the weight room controversy and said it will be fixed “as soon as possible.”

“I apologize to women’s basketball student-athletes, to the coaches, Women’s Basketball Committee for dropping the ball, frankly, on the weight room issue in San Antonio,” Gavitt said during Friday’s press briefing.

Holzman said the NCAA became aware of the training facility concerns through social media on Thursday. Within a few hours, the NCAA held a conference call with coaches and administrators to solicit feedback.

“We’re trying to do the right thing,” Holzman said.

The weight room isn’t the only area the NCAA is addressing. Athletes have also voiced concerns about the quality of food at the women’s tournament while athletes are quarantining. Holzman said Friday that they have been working to provide athletes with more options that can be delivered to the controlled environment.

The weight room disparity has touched on larger issues of inequality in women’s college basketball.

“The women’s basketball tournament ought to be an NCAA flagship event, yet it continues to be treated as some kind of cheap subsidized junior varsity by the book-cooking crooks,” Washington Post columnist Sally Jenkins wrote in a column Friday. “All these women ever do is raise their arc of performance, command steadily increasing viewership and graduate at a sky-high rate of 93%. For which they get petty insults and cheap treatment.”

In a video statement Friday in response to Prince’s video, tennis trailblazer Billie Jean King criticized the NCAA’s use of “Final Four” on social media to only highlight the men’s tournament.

“We’re always supposed to be so happy with just anything, the crumbs, whatever — we’re not happy anymore,” King said. “We want equity. We want equality. We want the same.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Locker rooms cause controversy as March Madness kicks off

No Comments Sports News

jetcityimage/iStockBy ABC News

(INDIANAPOLIS) — The NCAA basketball tournaments are back after being cancelled last year over COVID-19 concerns.

Now as the men’s and women’s tourneys begin, the NCAA is facing new concerns. The organization that oversees college athletics has come under fire after a video by Oregon’s Sedona Prince went viral, comparing the women’s and men’s weight rooms in their respective tournament bubbles.

Watch the report from ABC’s Good Morning America to learn more:

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.