Dydek is relevant to this discussion IMO...if the argument for lowering the rims was because the rim was too high for the women to play above the rim. Dydek did not want to dunk. If you think there are women in this league who can't dunk because the rim's too high, that's a little farfetched. It is philosophically not a part of the women's game universally. If I can find what I did with them, I'll post some articles that talk about this mindset. The most recent one I read was Van Chancellor trying to get his center Sylvia Fowles to dunk more. Not from a breakaway, not uncontested, but in the paint because she has the ability to dunk in the paint contested if she wanted to. I don't think he's full of BS. I don't think Pat Summitt is either when she talks about the women just not thinking about it as something to do in a game.
Finger rolls are layups. If you saw the open practice the Monarchs had you would see that not only can these women roll with the best of them, they can get above the rim with the ball. The game is there. The only thing that isn't that would make sense to me in this counter argument is dunking.
Re: the smaller ball...I think the women would prefer to play with the bigger ball. They managed fine with it when FIBA used it.
But to tell me this isn't making a tacit acknowledgement that the game needs to be played above the rim? Aren't you saying that very thing when you tell me that it needs to be played above the rim to get more males in the seats? That's EXACTLY what I'm arguing. Your argument is that this game fundamentally needs to be played above the rim. I don't agree and I don't agree that all males fans who might come to a game and become fans need a game that is played above a rim. Well played by talented players yes, but entirely above the rim no.
Again, I don't see the repulsion to the idea that this is a niche sport...right now. NASCAR was. The NBA was. But let me actually go with a contemporary...Arena Football is I believe is 20+ years old now. That's a viable model for the W. It's found it's niche and has survived, it's family friendly entertainment. In the age of cable and satellite and non stop entertainment choices, that's about as much as a new league can ask for 12 years in.