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Thirty Years Later: Title IX Still Controversial
by Matt Sedensky

Equal Opportunity Coaching
by Allison Steele

The New Female Athlete
by Margarita Bertsos

Overtraining and Undereating
by Falasten Abdeljabbar

Playing Like a Girl
by Sasha Stumacher

Women's Tennis: The Marketing Model
by Daniel Mitha

Who Gets The Ball?
by Anne-Marie Harold

Selling Skin
by Suzanne Rozdeba

SlamJam and the Future
by Mike Gorman

Playing Out Identity
by Maya Jex


Since women's sports gained popularity, more men are taking over coaching positions.
Photo by Mike Gorman

 

SlamJam and the Future
Part 2:
Sexism in Coaching Women's Teams

Sandoz sees the increasing attention from moneyed interests as taking something away from what has made women's athletics special, and different from the lucrative men's organizations, even while they provide women with more opportunities.

"I do see the introduction of the marketplace into women's sports as having a disruptive and detrimental effect on what I loved about being an athlete," she says.

Sandoz feels that the major roadblock for women's sports in terms of entering the mainstream is sexism.

"The percentage of women administrators, coaches and officials in women's sports programs is at an all-time low in U.S. history," she says. "I can say that as soon as there was financial reward in women's sport, men began to see us as worth paying attention to, but not before."

Doug Feinberg coaches the New York Panthers, a SlamJam team made up of girls from various private schools in Manhattan. "Unfortunately," he says, "right now in the WNBA, for marketing reasons, there are more men coaching. But I think down the road there are going to be more women in those spots."

Coaches' Salaries for College Division I-A
Men's and Women's Coaches (1996-1997)


Chronicle of Higher Education
Click Here
for more statistics like this

Feinberg believes that as more young women gain a better understanding of the game, the more women coaches we’ll see in the future.

"As a guy having never been a teenage girl, I’ll never be able to relate to teenaged girls the way a woman could, to understand the mentality. This leads me to believe that there will be more coaching opportunities for women in the future."

"Not to say that men can’t coach women," he quickly points out.

"I’ve coached now for five years, we’ve won 34 straight games, so I’ve done something right, " he says. He has developed different approaches to handling coaching situations involving boys and girls. He has found that girls don’t respond well to verbal reprimand.

"When you yell at girls, they tend to quit on you, they don’t want to play for you anymore, so you have to adapt," he says.

Nevertheless, he has seen a collective shift in attitude over the past few years among girl players.

"In the past, with girls, when they lost, it was ‘Oh, whatever, so what are we doing tonight.’ Now, it’s getting to the point where they lose a game they get mad, they get pissed," he said.

He feels that this has both positive and negative aspects. While the level of competitiveness has been raised, he is aware that this can be taken too far.

"I don’t think we’re even close to that point yet, though. I can see it eventually happening," he said.

"As long as there are women out there, with the Title IX situation, it’s not going to change. Women play harder than men anyway."

Feinberg agrees that the women’s basketball attracts a different market. He doesn’t see the women’s game and the style of play being quite so testosterone-charged as the men’s game.

"There’s definitely more of what [women] can do as a team, whereas with the NBA, it’s like ‘WOW, look at that nice move Vince Carter just made." He points out that there have only been four dunks in the history of women’s basketball.

"The fundamentals are stressed more, so I think it’s more of a family game. The atmosphere is more what the NBA used to be. The WNBA may someday become what the NBA is now, but I doubt it, just because of basic physical differences between men and women," he said.

Sitting at the administration table overlooking the basketball court at St. Johns University’s Alumni Hall, Clyde Frazier Jr. watches two teams participating in the April 2001 SlamJam April Super 16 Tournament, a showcase for girls aged 16 and under.

"Ten years ago, you never saw girls playing in this kind of venue, at a major university," he says. "Girls playing basketball used to be just a passing fancy, now girls play hard and they’re getting better as the years progress. They’re more aggressive, there are more girls playing, and more girls playing well."

Feinberg shares his excitement.

"This whole tournament is a showcase for college coaches to come and seek kids during the period of time when they can recruit them. These are all freshman, sophomores and juniors. This is more about exposure for the kids than anything else, " he said.

He thinks it is especially important for the private school girls on his team, who rarely get to see the level of play that the entire public school system has to offer.

"They might think, ‘Oh, I’m a great ball player, they get out here today, and see where they really stand,’" he said.

"SlamJam has been great for a lot of players. A lot of college coaches come out and have the opportunity to see the players from ninth grade on up, and recruit for the future. Now there’s something to shoot for, it’s not just about going overseas," says Ron Moore, women’s coach at Five Towns College on Long Island.

Moore believes that the sky is the limit for all women involved in women’s sports.

"As long as there are women out there, with the Title IX situation, it’s not going to change. Women play harder than men anyway," he said.

<<Back to previous page




SlamJam players face off in the league's 2001 tournament.
Photo by Mike Gorman

PAGE 1:
An opportunity for inner-city girls carries women's sports into the future >>

PAGE 2:
Women's sports soar, but female coaches get a raw deal>>

 


SlamJam Women's Basketball Classic
Basketball league for girls and women

Adventurous Woman Sports
Sports classes for women, taught by women

Women's Sports Foundation
Events, research, news

Women's National Basketball Association
Official site

SportsForWomen.com
Features the latest women's sports news, chat rooms, shopping

WWW Women's Sports
Current issues, history, media, organizations

Feminist Research Center
Research on women in sports


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