Notre Dame women’s basketball coach Muffet McGraw made a splash in a recent interview by saying that she was no longer hiring men as assistant coaches. On Thursday at the NCAA women’s Final Four, her views went viral when she delivered an impassioned two-minute speech decrying the lack of progress for women in coaching and politics.

“We don’t have enough female role models, we don’t have enough visible women leaders, we don’t have enough women in power,” McGraw said at a news conference in Tampa. “Girls are socialized to know when they come out, gender roles are already set. Men run the world. Men have the power. Men make the decisions.”

Women made up 59.5% of Division I women’s basketball head coaches in 2018, according to NCAA data, down from 63.6% a decade earlier. Men make up 100% of Division I men’s basketball head coaches.

“So yes, when you look at men’s basketball, and 99% of the jobs go to men, why shouldn’t 100 or 99% of the jobs in women’s basketball go to women?” McGraw said. “Maybe it’s because we only have 10% women athletic directors in Division I. People hire people who look like them. And that’s the problem.”

Women made up 11% of Division I athletic directors in 2018, according to the NCAA.