ESPN uses the anniversary of Title IX to look at the disturbing lack of women in US college coaching (h/t Outsports):
In the end, though, those hurdles are less daunting than two others,
more entrenched and insidious, that women have faced over the past four
decades: homophobia and blatant sexism. "When you look at the decline in
the percentage of women coaches," says Helen Carroll, of the National
Center for Lesbian Rights, "sexual orientation has a lot to do with it."
Homophobia has haunted women's sports throughout the Title IX era,
forcing coaches to stay closeted for fear of losing their jobs, or at
least recruits. In some quarters, coaches have been known to signal
quietly to prospects or their parents that a competing program is run by
a lesbian, in an effort to turn the recruit away.
To this day, there is only one out lesbian coach in Division I
basketball, Portland State's Sherri Murrell. In a 2009 paper on negative
recruiting, Carroll and Pat Griffin, of the Women's Sports Foundation,
wrote, "The psychological toll of silence, denial and secrecy results in
a climate of fear and hostility that many lesbian, gay and bisexual
coaches endure in order to pursue their profession. Others simply choose
to leave the profession."
It's not only established coaches who check out. Former players often
decide the hassle isn't worth it. Two former collegiate stars, Sue
Wicks of Rutgers and Abby Conklin of Tennessee, told ESPN The Magazine
in 2011 that homophobia still casts a wide shadow over the sidelines. In
the same story, former WNBA star Kate Starbird stressed that she
wouldn't consider coaching because she refused to be closeted. "I didn't
want to live my life that way," she said.
Read in full HERE.
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