1. Women have 15 scholarships compared to 13 for men. Once the men had their numbers reduced, that took 50 players off of Top 25 teams and filtered them to mid-major programs. It's no coincidence that we've seen the rise of programs like Butler, Gonzaga, Wichita State, VCU, etc. as consistent year-in, year-out threats since the scholarship reduction took effect. To keep Title IX compliant, the women will always stay at 15 and there will be potential impact players at that second-tier level who will willingly ride the bench at the elite schools for that shot at Final Four or national titles.
2. You're still allowed to play home games in the women's tournament. You think people ***** about Duke and UNC staying in-state in the early rounds...if teams could stay at Rupp, Cameron, Allen, the Deandome, etc. for the men's tournament there'd be far fewer upsets as well.
3. Women's basketball today on the evolutionary scale is roughly where men's basketball was in the 1970's. Back then, who did you see on television? UCLA, Indiana, Kentucky, Notre Dame, DePaul, North Carolina and not much else. And where did players go to play? The schools where they could be seen. Today, with FoxSports, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPNU, CBS not to mention on-demand options, you can go anywhere and still be seen by family halfway across the country (or scouts). You don't have to settle for just one of 8-10 options. The women? Still back in the 70's equivalent. 95% of the time, it's going to be UConn, Notre Dame, Baylor, South Carolina, Tennessee and Stanford that you'll see if your randomly turn on one of the games.