Vector, one might assume you are a private person on topics you select to be private and pretty outspoken on others, like this one.
I am not quite sure how this all shakes out.
Within the next 2 years, Hendrix College, Texas Lutheran University and Southwestern College will all be starting college football programs at the D3 level. There may be more. Those are the ones I know and the ones which will provide opportunities for 80-90 young men, per team, to play college football.
On this site, within the last week there is news of Marymount College(VA.) starting college baseball which will probably provide 35 or more opportunities for young men and 3-5 opportunities for male coaches.
Out in the real world, even here in Silicon Valley, the opportunities and pay for women are not equal or in most situations close to equal with men, especially in management and upper level management positions.
Finally, budget issues and the skills(competence) of AD's remain a legitimate question in my mind, before we indict Title IX, completely. Taking the Cal situation, I am not at all convinced baseball is free and clear. Their football stadium/locker room renovations cost about $350,000,000. They budgeted those costs would almost completely be borne by private seat licenses in the new stadium. Bad budget. As of August, the PSL's were less than $100,000,000 and it is becoming clear there is going to be at least $200,000,000 or more of debt to be borne by the athletic department, university, taxpayers, or some combination.
Add to that there isn't much news that Cal raised more than $10,000,000 for baseball. The new contract for the HC runs close to $400,000 per year. Cal baseball was running a $1M deficit before the PR disaster surrounding the department and baseball. As I understood the "rules," Cal baseball needs to be fully funded, privately, to continue and the UC estimates were it would take an endowment of $70,000,000 to $80,000,000 to make it work. None of this adds up and Cal football is creating a potential major money drain which may only be partially met by the revenue from the Pac12 TV contract.
I have no idea about Towson State and the budget and football revenue but my guess would be it is negative, not positive. The school chose to keep football and make a run at future revenue growth, it appears.
To say young men have less opportunities in college, well, I am not sure, if we include opportunities evidenced at the D3 level. Adding at least one D3 baseball program and 3 D3 football programs appears to be growth, not subtraction.
If Cal if any indication, there appear to be plenty to question on budgeting and choices in some universities.
Does Title IX probably have infirmities in application also? Most probably.
Is this all one sided or another or a problematic combination of law and budget and skill sets in the AD and administration of some Universities, and terrible revenue projections like those which appear at UC Berkeley? That would be my best judgement.
The real bottom line: women still don't succeed equally in our workplace for positions, earnings and especially for management equality.
This situation is due to multiple reasons, not one or another, just like Title IX and college athletic opportunities isn't one..or the other.