吃瓜头条

Title IX turns 50 years old this month. The landmark legislation formally sought to reverse the impact of pervasive sex discrimination on American women. When the Higher Education Amendments passed in 1972, Title IX prohibited discrimination on the basis of sex in any educational institution or program receiving federal aid.

Title IX has since increased access to educational opportunities for three generations of American women, while forcing a sea change in women鈥檚 athletics from youth sports to the upper echelons of Olympic and professional competition.

At 吃瓜头条, which opened to students in Fall 1962, the men鈥檚 athletics program began the following academic year, 1963-64. The Blue Devil Athletics Department didn鈥檛 include a women鈥檚 sport until 1971, a year before Title IX was passed.

That didn鈥檛 make the college wrong. The college now features a balanced athletics department with seven women鈥檚 programs and seven men鈥檚 programs.

That also doesn鈥檛 make the college unique.聽It simply shows the work that has been done in U.S. schools over the past five decades to increase equity.

鈥淲e were very blessed to have [original athletics director] Don Odishoo guide us from the start,鈥 said women鈥檚 basketball coach Allen Huddleston Sr., whose 29-year tenure included coaching the first generation of Title IX athletes showing up on campus.聽鈥淚t has been a different story adapting to Title IX here at the college with a supportive administration.鈥

How it started

According to annual course catalogs, Blue Devil athletics started in 1963 with varsity men鈥檚 programs in basketball, wrestling, baseball and tennis. The college added football and golf for the 1964-65 academic year and track and cross country in 1965-66.

Coming on the heels of Title IX鈥檚 passage, volleyball was the first women鈥檚 team in 1971. The school began adding women鈥檚 cross country, tennis, softball, swimming, track and field and water polo several years later.

The college鈥檚 athletics slate has fluctuated the past 50 years. Tennis, cross country, wrestling and golf are no longer offered. According to outgoing athletics director Steve Cassady, Blue Devil softball shut down when coach Sheryl Wiens retired in 1986. There was no team in 1987, but it returned in 1988 when Cassady took over as coach. The college also permanently added women鈥檚 basketball for the 1992-93 season.

鈥淲e added women鈥檚 basketball, not only to come into compliance with Title IX, but because it was the right thing to do,鈥 said E. Jan Kehoe, the 吃瓜头条 president at the time.

Most recently, 吃瓜头条 shuttered men鈥檚 soccer after the 1999 season and women鈥檚 soccer after 2002. Title IX requires institutions to respond to community desires. So, still hearing a consistent clamor for soccer from annual student-interest surveys, the college brought back both teams in 2021.

Title IX wanted schools to increase opportunities for women proportional to what existed for men based on their demographics, but it wasn鈥檛 as simple as adding women鈥檚 teams to match the numbers of male athletes.

Kehoe said they first had to understand that no single women鈥檚 team could balance numbers from a football team. Also, it was difficult to find additional money to pay for startup costs like uniforms or facility additions or upgrades, and then also build a budget to fund annual operating expenses like salaries, travel and per diems.

How it鈥檚 going

吃瓜头条 now supports roughly 350 athletes in football, women鈥檚 volleyball, baseball, softball, and men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 squads in basketball, soccer, water polo, swimming and diving, and track and field.

Volleyball coach Jessica Casey said she had a great situation when she started coaching in 2004 because Cassady, the athletics director at the time, coached women and advocated for women鈥檚 sports.

Casey, 45, represents the second generation of Title IX, which grew up as the legislation helped rip down a curtain of myths about women鈥檚 athletic capabilities.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 even imagine being told I can鈥檛 do something because of my gender,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something we even whisper around the water cooler anymore.鈥

Current Merced High volleyball coach Patricia Flanagan-Khodikian says community colleges allow athletes to extend their careers and help them strengthen their chances of playing at a four-year school.

Flanagan-Khodikian, 30, is part of the third generation of Title IX, the one that easily found opportunities and increasingly better coaching at the 鈥渘ext level鈥 while playing volleyball at Stone Ridge Christian High, for Casey at 吃瓜头条, and for another two years at NAIA Hope International University in Fullerton.

Ironically, Flanagan-Khodikian admits she knew nothing of Title IX until she was a college senior studying college sports management.

That is not a knock on her. It actually shows how far women鈥檚 sports has come that she had the luxury of not knowing how deeply Title IX informed her athletics career.

鈥淓verywhere I have played and coached have been places where they worked hard at equity in athletics,鈥 Flanagan-Khodikian said.聽 鈥淚 had a blast as an athlete because of that. Now, as a coach, anytime my girls are on the fence about playing in college, I can tell them to just give it a chance.鈥

Where it鈥檚 headed

Because of the overall growth in women鈥檚 athletics, coaching women鈥檚 sports is a legitimate career path. But it has also created a preponderance of male coaches coaching women鈥檚 teams.

Two of 11 Blue Devil head coaches are women鈥擟asey, who will be coaching her 19th season at the college in Fall 2022, and former Blue Devil softball standout Suzanne McGhee, who just finished her 14th season this spring.

鈥淚鈥檝e been trying to train [one of my players] to take over for years,鈥 Huddleston said. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen so many young women who would make outstanding coaches. It鈥檚 important that they come back and share their skill.鈥

Flanagan-Khodikian, who also coaches for the Twisters local travel volleyball team, added, 鈥淎s soon as we see someone with a drive for the sport, we tell them they should coach. It鈥檚 not just a job. When you鈥檝e followed that path yourself, you realize which life skills you鈥檝e learned from competing鈥攂eing a good teammate, grit, a strong work ethic and how to remain calm under pressure.鈥

Casey agrees women鈥檚 sports at all levels need more women coaches and administrators.

鈥淲e need those female voices,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd they need to get paid. The WNBA and women鈥檚 soccer have been fighting for equal pay for years. When the amount of work athletes put into their craft is equal, but women are being paid dramatically less, we鈥檙e still fighting that battle.鈥

Moving forward, Title IX will also be tested by how successfully schools protect LGBTQ+ students. In 2020, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Adams v. The School Board of St. Johns County Florida affirmed that Title IX also protects people who face discrimination for their gender identity and sexual orientation.

鈥淚 think female athletes are doing amazing things right now, and it鈥檚 so fun to watch and to be a part of,鈥 Casey said. 鈥淏ut [equity in athletics] is still a fight. It鈥檚 a conversation we should continue to have.鈥