This one almost slipped under the radar… but Kerry caught it, and then I saw CNN’s follow-up article on it.
A View From the Schoolhouse
This one almost slipped under the radar… but Kerry caught it, and then I saw CNN’s follow-up article on it.
I have been following the political mess down in Texas since it started. The GOP in Texas, under the direction of U.S. Congressman Tom Delay, have been downright naked in their attempt to change the rules to suit their own purpose — in this case redistricting three years after the last time instead of ten years, because it would give the GOP more seats in the U. S. House of Representatives. I admired the Democrats who were willing to go into exile for the past few months in order to bring this issue to the light of day.
So, I read with mixed emotions the news that the Texas Ten (they were 11) had returned. One problem is, of course, that they will probably lose. The only things that would keep the GOP from enacting the redistricting is tradition, a sense of propriety or really bad PR. DeLay and Rove have shown that they don’t care about either of the first two, and somehow, this issue is just esoteric enough to not capture America’s attention.
ESPN.com reports that, on the eve of the Women’s World Cup, the U.S. women’s soccer league, the WUSA, is shutting down. This both saddens and frustrates me because I know so many Beacon girls’ soccer players loved the WUSA.
As a coach of a girls basketball team, I have been following the WUSA and the WNBA with really high hopes. On some level, it bothers me that it’s going to take successful professional leagues for women’s sports to truly be embraced by mainstream America, but that’s probably the truth. Until then, lots of girls are going to have to keep fighting to convince people that they play a "real" sport.
Even at Beacon, where women’s sports are respected and thrive, it’s taken several years for the boys’ basketball coaches to finally put "Boys Basketball" on their signs, rather than just "The Basketball Team." (And thank you, John and Ninji, for not thinking I was crazy for bugging you about that.) But it’s still true in a lot of schools that girls sports are not taken seriously or the female athletes do not get the respect the boys do.
The exposure of the WNBA and the WUSA raised the bar. There’s a lot of baggage that goes with pro sports, but women’s pro sports have changed the way a lot of young girls have looked at themselves… their identities… their bodies. I went to a WUSA event last year, and to see the way the young girls looked at the athletes was to realize what power having a pro league had.
On the eve of the Women’s World Cup, it’s a shame that the WUSA couldn’t find a way to stay viable. Perhaps the WWC will respark the league, but even if it does, it appears that both major women’s sports leagues will have to struggle to survive in the immediate future.
And what message does that send to our young female athletes?
[Updated: ESPN.com has published another story talking about much the same ideas that I was writing about here.]