South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley has called out the NCAA over the organization’s treatment of women’s basketball in a scathing statement posted Friday night.

Staley says he felt the need to speak out after numerous social media posts highlighted the differences in accommodations and amenities offered at the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournaments. Photos and videos showed the differences in weight setups, catered food and “swag bags.” Staley focused on the bigger picture. She started her takedown by focusing on branding and marketing, including social media.

“The issue here looms larger,” Staley wrote. “Let’s start with the NCAA @marchmadness official verified Twitter account. The tag line leaves no run for misinterpretation— ‘The Official NCAA March Madness destination for all things Division I/NCAA Men’s Basketball.’ Those words mean one thing — March Madness is ONLY about men’s basketball.

“How do we explain that to our players? How can an organization that claims to care about ALL member institutions’ student-athlete experiences have a copyrighted term that only “represents” one gender.”

NCAA Senior Vice President of women’s basketball Lynn Holzman publicly responded to the reports about the differences and disparities in tournament amenities. Staley shared her assessment that Holzman is doing the best she can do with limited resources, taking aim at NCAA President Mark Emmert.

“There is no answer that the NCAA executive leadership led by Mark Emmert can give to explain the disparities. Mark Emmert and his team point blank chose to create them!” Staley wrote. “The real issue is not the weight or the ‘swag’ bags; it’s that they did not think or do not think that women’s players ‘deserve’ the same amenities of the men.”

Staley’s full statement can be read in the tweet embedded below.