In honor of the 37th birthday of Title IX, I am posting a commentary I wrote ten years ago, on the 27th birthday of the legislation that changed the landscape of women's sports forever. A slightly different version of this was published in the Minneapolis Star Tribune in 1999.
A generation of girls who compete as a matter of course
I was a pre-Title IX female athlete. Twenty-seven years later, my 13-year-old daughter is one of the thousands of soccer-playing girls riding high after the U.S. women's soccer team World Cup victory. I can say from personal experience that the recent Republican-sponsored House resolution to pay tribute to the U.S. women’s soccer team without acknowledging Title IX and its impact on the evolution of women’s sports was grievously wrong.
In 1972-1973, I was a junior at a suburban Minneapolis high school. The coach of the boy’s varsity ski team asked me to tryout for the team. While I skied competitively for an area ski club, there was no girls varsity ski team at my high school, and thus, no opportunity for me to compete in varsity sports, at least in my sport of choice.
So I tried out for the boys’ team and made the third-pace slot. However, the Minnesota State High School League, the governing body for Minnesota high school sports, had a rule that girls could not compete on boys’ teams, even if they legitimately earned a place on the team. The League informed my school that the entire team would be disqualified if I competed in a varsity ski meet.
My parents decided to challenge the rule and took the issue to court. The courts ruled in our favor and I was allowed to compete for my high school. Suddenly, much to my embarrassment, I was in the news as a barrier breaker. In 1972, girl athletes such as myself who trained hard, developed muscles, and thrilled to aggressive competition, were typically viewed, especially among our peers, as weird. The last thing my fragile self-esteem needed was more attention for being a jock. I just wanted to ski.
However, I am absolutely grateful that I happened to be in the right place at the right time, and thanks to Title IX, did get to ski for my high school and earn two varsity letters, something for which I am very proud.
Since then, I have thrilled at the change in both opportunity and attitude for women’s sports and athletics. 1n 1999, from the Sunday afternoon jogger to the serious athlete, girls and women now have a full array of competitive sports and fitness activities in which to participate.
My athletic daughter is coming of age at a time when sports, sweat and muscles are just a normal part of being female. She started playing soccer when she was nine at the neighborhood park because all of her friends were signing up to play. She now plays in a competitive girls’ soccer league full of other girls who love to play hard. They yell, “Be aggressive!” at the beginning of games. They are praised for being tough on the field, for teamwork, for pushing to the max.
I think the best thing about the post-Title IX world of female sports is that these young girls don’t think twice about being competitive athletes. They have no idea that 27 years ago there were far fewer athletic opportunities for girls. They have no idea that the general attitude toward female athletes was indifference at best and contempt at worst.
My daughter didn’t even watch the U.S. World Cup victory live. She had me tape it for later, when she got back from the mall. For her, it was not, as it was for me, a rearrange all your plans, historic, not to be missed event. It was a cool and important thing, but just one part of the fabric of her adolescent life. Yet, thanks to Title IX, she and millions of other girls don’t have to want to be like Mike when they imagine themselves champions. They can want to be like Brianna, Mia or Christine, and think its no big deal. Now that’s a revolution.
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