The report, released in August and prepared by the firm of the civil rights lawyer Roberta A. Kaplan, said:
“The NCAA’s broadcast agreements, corporate sponsorship contracts, distribution of revenue, organizational structure, and culture all prioritize Division I men’s basketball over everything else in ways that create, normalize, and perpetuate gender inequities. At the same time, the NCAA does not have structures or systems in place to identify, prevent, or address those inequities.”
The use of the term “March Madness” has long been one of the most visible differences between the men’s and women’s tournaments, both for its use on CBS broadcasts during men’s tournament games and its presence on the N.C.A.A.’s website and social media platforms to describe only men’s games. (The women’s basketball tournament is televised by ESPN.)
David Worlock, the N.C.A.A.’s director of media coordination for the men’s basketball tournament, said the association hopes to create a “March Madness” logo for the women’s tournament that is similar to the logo for the men’s tournament but with distinctions so that it is easy for fans to identify each tournament as they are promoted.
Worlock acknowledged that the branding change was made in response to the gender equity report, and said the N.C.A.A. and its staff are “looking at all those different factors that were raised in the report.”
A $600 million dip in revenue because of the cancellation of the men’s tournament in 2020, the report said, prompted N.C.A.A. officials to focus to heavily on how the men’s tournament would rebound, to the detriment of the women’s tournament.