Laurie Priest, "Run, Atalanta, Run: You Do Not Run Alone"
(page 2 of 3)
Besides the fact that girls have 1.17 million fewer participation
opportunities at the high school level and 54,557 fewer participation
opportunities at the collegiate level, the resources spent on sport for
females have also never caught up to the resources allocated to males.
Currently, 57 percent of our college and university populations are
female, yet female athletes receive only 37 percent of our sports
operating budgets, 33 percent of the dollars spent on recruiting, and 45
percent of athletic scholarship funding. This amounts to $133 million
less than male athletes receive in scholarships each year. It is clear
that the Atalanta syndrome is alive and well, as we continue to
seriously shortchange our daughters.
I want to make it perfectly clear that women's sports have not gained
at the expense of opportunities for men. From 1988-89 to 2003-04, 3,304
women's teams were added and 1,967 were dropped, for a net gain of 1,967
teams. During the same time period, NCAA schools added 2050 sports for
men while dropping 1951, for a net gain of 99 new men's sports
teams.[3]
As noted by Professor Stimpson, many blame Title IX for
the decline in men's sports such as wrestling, gymnastics, and other
minor sports, and yet these data show that participation rates have
increased annually for men.
Any claim that the decline in men's wrestling teams is due to Title
IX is unfounded. From 1984 to 1988, Title IX's application to
intercollegiate athletics was suspended due to the Supreme Court's
decision in Grove City College v. Bell. This decision held that
only those programs that directly receive federal funds - intercollegiate
athletics do not - were covered by Title IX. In that four year period,
when the three-part test[4]
was not in effect, colleges and
universities cut wrestling teams at a rate almost three times as high as
the rate of decline during the 12 years after Title IX's application to
intercollegiate athletic programs was firmly reestablished by the Civil
Rights Restoration Act of 1987. Data on the interscholastic level
support a declining interest in wrestling as well. High school wrestling
participation peaked in 1976-77 at 355,160. By 1981-82, it declined to
245,029, and by 1989-99, to 235,973.[5]
In gymnastics, most athletic administrators would agree that the most
likely reason for the elimination of teams is liability. The significant
loss of women's gymnastic teams over the same period supports this
contention. During the past 15 years, 100 women's gymnastics teams and
56 men's gymnastic teams have been discontinued at the college
level.[6]
Certainly, no one would consider blaming Title IX for the
loss of so many women's teams.
In analyzing the data, it appears that the wealthiest schools, those
capable of fielding large athletic programs, are choosing to allocate
significant resources to a limited number of sport programs. It should
be noted that in NCAA Division I-A, 74 percent of the total men's
athletics operating budgets are spent on two programs, football and
men's basketball.[7]
Some may say, well, this is all right, because
football supports all other programs. But this is one of the biggest
myths in intercollegiate athletics. Revenue producing and profit
generating are not equivalent terms. Many sports produce revenues, but
few produce profits. Among NCAA programs in all competitive divisions,
78 percent of all football programs and 73 percent of all basketball
programs spend more than they bring in and contribute nothing to other
sports budgets. Even among Division I-A football programs, more than one
third are running deficits in excess of $1 million per year.[8]
The sport of football has done nothing but thrive during the Title IX
era. According to the General Accounting Office, football participation
across all three NCAA divisions has increased by a total of 7,199
players, which more than offsets the combined losses of male
participants in wrestling (2,648), tennis (1,405), and gymnastics
(1,022). The average Division I-A football roster has grown to 117 as
coaches continue to say they need more players to be successful.[9]
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