The NCAA menâs basketball tournament typically has the biggest spotlight when it reaches the Final Four, with the best teams â or luckiest â to have survived March Madness playing the final games to determine a national champion.
Now imagine how it could look with the womenâs tournament bringing its Final Four to the same city on the same weekend.
The idea of a combined Final Four sounds attractive as a showcase for Division I college basketball and it is also one of the key recommendations in a scathing report examining how the NCAA conducts its championship events when it comes to gender equity.
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May 6, 2021
Not even two months removed from the men s basketball program s first Division I NCAA tournament bid, the University of Hartford is heading back down the college athletics ladder.
Hartford s Board of Regents voted to drop its athletic teams from Division I to Division III on Thursday, per Alex Putterman of the
Hartford Courant. The move is set to take place no later than Sept. 1, 2025, according to Putterman.
Christopher Hanewinckel/USA TODAY Sports
“Intercollegiate athletics has long been an integral part of the University of Hartford student experience and that will not change,” Board of Regents chair David Gordon said in a statement. “At the same time, a move to Division III will allow the University to further strengthen the academic, co-curricular, and wellness experience for all students. While we know this decision will disappoint some members of our community, we remain confident that this shift is in the best long-term interests of the institution a
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