Quantcast

Softball coach takes on football

posted by Title IX Blog
Monday, November 16, 2009 at 12:15pm EST

An interdisciplinary resource for news, legal developments, commentary, and scholarship about Title IX, the federal statute prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded schools.

Support women's sports and SHARE this story with your friends!

Usually when we hear about a complaint filed by or on behalf of softball players, said complaint usually compares the treatment softball receives or the facilities it has access to as compared to baseball. But a recent complaint, initially filed anonymously and then admitted to by the softball coach at Theodore High School in Mobile County Alabama, compares the treatment the team get to that of the football team. Perfectly legitimate of course and we have been somewhat concerned by all the softball versus baseball references because that, of course, is not how Title IX compliance is measured.
Coach Tyler Murray seems to be a brave person to take on football in Alabama but her version of the facts is pretty compelling. OCR has already done its site visitation so a report is likely forthcoming.
Murray says that her team does not have access to the same kinds of facilities as the football team nor have they received the same portion of donations to the athletic department. The weights her team (and others worked out on) were removed from the weight room they used. They spent most of their season working out in hallways and the shower area. She alleges that 40 percent of the equipment was damaged because of the move which resulted in some of the pieces being put outside where they rusted. And when her players tried to use the weight room the football team uses, they were kicked out, she said.
After the complaint was filed, the high school converted an art room into a weight room.
Murray also noted that football coaches get paid more than other coaches. The response to this complaint was that this is a nationwide trend. Not exactly a compelling retort.
Her issues have been with her athletic director who, not coincidentally, is also the football coach. He will not comment on the complaint, only saying that he is in compliance. Murray said she had accepted that she and her team gets less, but that her tipping point was when what she had began being taken away from her.
Interestingly, the quotations from the superintendent's statement refers to the law as "Title Nine." This worries me a little. But I am looking forward to hearing what OCR found during its September visit.

Support women's sports and SHARE this story with your friends!


Filed Under:  

View Original Post at title-ix.blogspot.com

View EBuz's Full Profile

No one has commented on this yet. Be the first!

Leave Your Comment:  Read our comment policy

  |  

MOST POPULAR ARTICLES & POSTS

Women's Sports: The Changing Face of Beauty
posted by mhueter

January 31, 2012 at 10:34pm

NCAA Signing Day - Notable soccer signings
posted by All White Kit

February 3, 2011 at 9:19am

Gina Carano on Top Watched MMA Fights List
posted by Cheryl Ragsdale

April 10, 2011 at 11:05am

Interview with Dara Torres
posted by anngaff

May 6, 2010 at 12:26am

Top power female athletes of 2011
posted by Pretty Tough

February 11, 2011 at 12:31am

The Beautiful Naked People
posted by MsAkiba

October 11, 2009 at 2:40pm