COLUMBIA, S.C. — It is hard to escape Cocky the Gamecock at the University of South Carolina. The mascot’s statue stands prominently on the quad, and its garnet feathers are displayed on doors and banners across campus. Nowhere is that more apparent than at Colonial Life Arena, home to the top women’s basketball team in the country.
But as fans filled the stands in the first and second rounds of the N.C.A.A. women’s basketball tournament last weekend, new iconography emerged for the first time: the “March Madness” logo.
After 40 years of competition, the women’s tournament is starting to more closely resemble the men’s, at least on the surface. That includes the use of the March Madness language, a trademark that, until last fall, the N.C.A.A. had reserved for the men’s tournament. So while Cocky was still on the court Friday and Sunday, March Madness banners, merchandise and decals competed for fans’ attention.
It was one of a handful of changes carried out by the N.C.A.A. after a viral video at last year’s tournament led to a landmark review that detailed inequities between the men’s and women’s events. Here’s how the changes have panned out so far, in what some coaches and players say should be just the start.