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Does Title IX Need Fixing?

Title IX, which revolutionized women’s sports, is often blamed for the demise of some men’s sports.

 

 

The University of Richmond is ending its men’s soccer team and the athletic director blames Title IX, the 1972 federal act that sparked a revolution in women’s sports by providing basic parity with men’s sports.

That hit home for two reasons: First, because Sean Baker, a Salisbury High School soccer star with whom my older son played, is now on the Richmond squad and will lose his team. Second, because I owe a lot to Title IX.

When my son found out Baker – an outstanding player and a terrific young man – would have to end his college soccer career or transfer, he was outraged. He said simply: “Sean Baker not playing soccer? That’s a crime.”  

And it is. Anybody who plays with as much joy and drive and talent as Baker ought to have a suitable home for his passion.

Richmond is getting rid of men’s soccer and men’s track in order to add men’s lacrosse, which a university committee decided would be more attractive to students and advantageous for Division 1 play. The university’s athletic director is blaming Title IX because – he says – if they add men’s lacrosse without scrapping another men’s sport, they’d have to add a women’s sport. He says they can’t afford that and don’t want to reserve more spots for student-athletes. 

The university president claims the decision to substitute lacrosse for men’s soccer and track wasn’t connected to the $3 million in donations pledged for an endowment for the new lacrosse team.

My high school’s yearbooks are a study in before-and-after Title IX. Looking through the yearbook from 1972, the year the law was enacted, the sports section is a sea of teenage boys.

That year, my school had boys varsity teams in football, baseball, basketball, golf, cross country, track and field, soccer, wrestling, tennis, bowling, swimming and a boys fitness squad. Several sports also fielded boys junior varsity and freshman teams.

And for girls? Girls at my high school in 1972 had swimming, cheerleading, majorettes and color guard.

Then Title IX worked its magic and by the time I graduated in 1977, girls had integrated the track and cross-country teams and had their own softball, basketball, volleyball, gymnastics, field hockey and tennis teams.

I played basketball, field hockey and softball and some of my fondest memories of high school come from those experiences. I still count hitting a line drive single as one of the great simple joys in life. (I rarely hit anything better than a single because – as my brother points out – glaciers move faster than I do.)

When you look at all the girls' and women’s teams now, it’s tempting to argue that Title IX is no longer necessary. But rollbacks in that progress seem much more likely in these tough economic times when high schools and colleges are looking to cut whatever they can. 

Title IX is often blamed for the demise of some men’s sports but NCAA statistics show more men than ever are competing. 

NCAA data show that the number of male college athletes grew in the past 10 years: a quarter of a million men now participate, up 38,000, according to ESPN magazine. As for women, 200,000 play NCAA sports, up 32,000 in the same period.

But what about the decrease in specific men’s sports, such as wrestling? A gap in enforcement of Title IX would suggest the law is being scapegoated.

In 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Title IX didn’t apply to college sports because they almost never received federal funds.

Four years later, Congress passed legislation saying that it did apply.

According to ESPN magazine: “During that four-year span when Title IX was not in effect for athletic departments, NCAA schools still dropped 53 wrestling programs, an average of 13.2 a year. From 1988 to 2000, when the law again covered sports, wrestling cuts slowed dramatically, with 56 programs dropped during that 12-year period, an average of 
4.7 a year.”

Still, I’m sympathetic to those frustrated with the apparent rigidity of interpretations of the law. Are there ways to interpret Title IX that still uphold the spirit of it, without blocking common sense solutions? I’m all ears. 

Related Topics: Lacrosse, Life in the Slow Lane, Salisbury High School, Sean Baker, Soccer, Title IX, Track and Field, Wrestling, and university of richmond

S

10:53 am on Thursday, October 4, 2012

Title IX was designed to try to give equal opportunities to men and women who want to play sports. While it's unfortunate that your son's friend is negatively affected (along with the rest of his teammates, and the track/field athletes) the requirements of Title IX are being followed at Richmond. The net-net is that there will be the same number of male athletes playing varsity sports there. That's the way the law was structured 40 years ago. Football and basketball are the only sports that generate any income in the NCAA, so frankly any other sport is at risk, or expendable. I am a big sports fan and it is upsetting to see students who want to play have their opportunity taken away from them. I am also a huge proponent of lacrosse, and while I'm thrilled to see the sport grow in another D-I school, I'm shocked that it was at the expense of a popular sport like soccer in this instance. In the end, Richmond chose to start a mens lacrosse program, and to stay within the bounds of Title IX - and not give disproportional opportunity to men over women - they had to reduce the headcount of other mens sports. Sadly it's simple math. I don't think there's any way around it.

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Clay McEldowney

2:20 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012

Title IX had leverything to do with the decision to drop varsity men's soccer team. Over the years, enforcement policies have taken the law from an anti gender discrimination statute to a gender quota rule, which has resulted in just what the law was intended to eliminate – gender discrimination, this time against males. Squad sizes have since been capped and traditional programs like soccer have been eliminated altogether. A male soccer player at Divisio 1 schools has a much less chance of receiving an athletic scholarship than does his female complement. Today’s male teams at Richmond – and elsewhere - struggle in their fight for equality. For background information, check out www.americansportscouncil.org

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John

3:44 pm on Friday, October 5, 2012

Let's face it, the athletic director and its board voted to add men's lacrosse. PERIOD. To blame it on a 40 year rule is plain stupid. How an administrator would raise a nickel, much less $3M to add a sport it doesnt have, and then blame a 40 year rule is failing to administrate and plan. Schools are no different than businesses. If they wanted to add Mens Lax then they should have planned to add another woman's sport. Maybe the reason they cut soccer was 2011 5-13-1; 2010 5-12-1 and 2009 7-11-2 and 2008 4-11-3......is their program has sucked. Regardless, the failure of adminstrators to properly paln is the mistake, not Title XI.

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Bill

8:53 pm on Sunday, October 7, 2012

"the failure of adminstrators to properly paln is the mistake"

Sorry John, but you prove the opposite point. The contingency that they failed to plan for IS Tile IX. It is that 40 year old law that, rigidly applied, enforces quotas on participation in sports. Spin it how you like, it is that very law that forced the cancellation of the men's soccer program.

John

1:11 pm on Monday, October 8, 2012

Bill, I would have to respectfully disagree. The fact is the law is in place, as is many rules of the NCAA. However, being that it is in place, and has been for 40 years, blaming a rule does not mitigate the failure of an AD to recognize the net effects upon, in this case Men's Soccer. It's not as though the plans to initiate Men's Lax met the program simultaneous to Title IX enactment, then you have a valid argument, but that was 40 years ago. This AD knew exactly what he was doing, and just didnt have the moxie to simply admit that he was replacing Men's Soccer with Men's Lax. It's pretty simple.

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Margie Peterson

2:34 pm on Monday, October 8, 2012

So my question remains: Is there a way to reinterpret Title IX so we don't return to the Bad Old Days when girls and women were denied equal opportunities to play sports but still let schools have more flexibility to add or subtract programs based on student interest? With more women then men attending college these days -- Kutztown University, for example, is 60 percent women -- it appears that this will be an ongoing concern.

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Margie Peterson

2:38 pm on Monday, October 8, 2012

Sorry, the old then/than issue caught me. I meant "With more women than men attending college these days..."

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