In 2008, the Indiana High School Athletic Association refused to allow a girl to try out for her high school’s baseball team. After the girl’s team of attorneys threatened to file a sex-discrimination suit, the girl was allowed to try out. The IHSAA also lifted their restriction on girls participation in boys’ basketball, baseball, football, soccer, and wrestling. (Cohen 1). In 1995, Heather Sue Mercer, a placekicker for Duke University’s football team, sued the university for sex discrimination. Mercer was the starting kicker on the Yorktown Heights high school team which won the 1993 state championship. She tried out for Duke’s team in 1994, but was unsuccessful. However, in 1995, she kicked the winning field goal in Duke’s intrasquad spring game and gained nationwide attention. Mercer accused former Duke coach, Fred Goldsmith, of telling her to “give up the little boys’ sports and try beauty pageants or cheerleading instead” and telling reporters that she was “pretty and looked like Molly Ringwald”. Goldsmith also made her the first cut in his tenure as head coach, while keeping the male walk on kicker who was not as accomplished, and banned her from the sideline calling her a “distraction” and telling her to “watch the games from the stands with her boyfriend” (Mravic 1). In 2006, a New York Mets broadcaster, Keith Hernandez, noticed a woman in the dugout and …show more content…
In 2008, the Women’s Sports Foundation, along with the Center for Research on Physical Activity at D’Youville College, teamed up to conduct a study based on two nationwide surveys of youth sport participation in the United States. The results showed that nearly equal percentages of boys and girls currently play organized/team sports in the United States. However, the participation rates varied a great deal by grade level and type of community. In urban communities, the percentage of elementary school girls participating in sports is fifty-nine percent compared to the elementary school boys’ participation being eighty percent. The gap in urban high school students’ participation was wide as well, with girls’ participation being fifty-nine percent and boys’ being sixty-eight percent. In suburban communities, the participation of girls and boys is nearly equal (Sabo 1).This may be due in part to sexism. In more populated areas, there are more chances for girls to be criticized like the examples given in the previous paragraph. The study concluded that “While more girls participate in sports than ever before in American history, a gender gap stretches across youth sports that favors males over females. The width of the gender gap is not uniform however, and it varies across grade levels, communities, income levels, and racial and ethnic