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Tag: athlete

  • Orlando half-marathon welcomes inspiring athletes with disabilities

    The 49th annual OUC Orlando Half Marathon is set to take place on Dec. 6 at Lake Eola, welcoming more than 5,000 participants to its inclusive event. Chris Nikic, a Special Olympics Florida athlete who made history in 2020 as the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman triathlon, is preparing to run the hometown half-marathon for the first time.”To blow past everyone,” Nikic said. “I have been doing half-marathons, which is pretty cool, and the crowd.” He is also proud to be a leader in recruiting athletes to participate, saying, “I am the top leader in recruiting athletes to come out and participate.”Chris’s father, Nik Nikic, shared insights into his son’s training regimen, noting, “Noah and his friends are helping him train by running at a faster pace for him. And teaching him what it feels like to run at, say, an eight-minute pace versus a 10- or 12-minute pace.” Nik also praised the event, saying, “OUC is wonderful, especially with track shack being part of it,” and emphasized the importance of the marathon, stating, “I think this is a great opportunity. For us to be an example for the rest of the world, and Central Florida and Orlando is a hub for all these things anyway.”Another inspiring participant is Caleb Prewitt, who, along with his mother Karen, will be traveling from Jacksonville to run the OUC half-marathon and the 5K. Caleb has completed 127 races, and they enjoy running together while raising community awareness and promoting inclusion. Karen expressed their passion for the sport, saying, “Do we love running? Yes. We love running — we love racing — we do triathlons as well, so we are kind of crazy.”She highlighted the importance of inclusion, stating, “For him to be included – for people to see him out running – to see what people with Down syndrome and other disabilities can do.”Caleb shared his favorite aspect of running.”So, running with mom,” Caleb said. “We usually run together. I think it’s just the community — we are part of a number of running groups. We just have a lot of fun with it.”Chris and Caleb are among the many remarkable runners to cheer for during the OUC weekend in downtown Orlando.

    The 49th annual OUC Orlando Half Marathon is set to take place on Dec. 6 at Lake Eola, welcoming more than 5,000 participants to its inclusive event.

    Chris Nikic, a Special Olympics Florida athlete who made history in 2020 as the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman triathlon, is preparing to run the hometown half-marathon for the first time.

    “To blow past everyone,” Nikic said. “I have been doing half-marathons, which is pretty cool, and the crowd.”

    He is also proud to be a leader in recruiting athletes to participate, saying, “I am the top leader in recruiting athletes to come out and participate.”

    Chris’s father, Nik Nikic, shared insights into his son’s training regimen, noting, “Noah and his friends are helping him train by running at a faster pace for him. And teaching him what it feels like to run at, say, an eight-minute pace versus a 10- or 12-minute pace.”

    Nik also praised the event, saying, “OUC is wonderful, especially with track shack being part of it,” and emphasized the importance of the marathon, stating, “I think this is a great opportunity. For us to be an example for the rest of the world, and Central Florida and Orlando is a hub for all these things anyway.”

    Another inspiring participant is Caleb Prewitt, who, along with his mother Karen, will be traveling from Jacksonville to run the OUC half-marathon and the 5K.

    Caleb has completed 127 races, and they enjoy running together while raising community awareness and promoting inclusion.

    Karen expressed their passion for the sport, saying, “Do we love running? Yes. We love running — we love racing — we do triathlons as well, so we are kind of crazy.”

    She highlighted the importance of inclusion, stating, “For him to be included – for people to see him out running – to see what people with Down syndrome and other disabilities can do.”

    Caleb shared his favorite aspect of running.

    “So, running with mom,” Caleb said. “We usually run together. I think it’s just the community — we are part of a number of running groups. We just have a lot of fun with it.”

    Chris and Caleb are among the many remarkable runners to cheer for during the OUC weekend in downtown Orlando.

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  • GWOAT Talk! Claressa Shields Signs Historic Multi-Million Dollar Deal As She Enters Rapper Era With Papoose (EXCLUSIVE DETAILS)

    Claressa Shields is making moves again, and the TL is taking notes! The undisputed heavyweight champ, five-division titleholder, and two-time Olympic gold medalist just inked a historic deal that lets her keep her foot on necks. And apparently, home isn’t just where the heart is—it’s where the bag stays! Sis is also entering her rapper era with her man, Papoose, at her side!

    RELATED: In Bliss! Claressa Shields & Papoose Celebrate Their 1-Year Anniversary With Sweet Social Media Posts (PHOTOS)

    Shields Makes History With $8M Boxing-Music Deal

    This month, news broke that Shields signed a guaranteed $8 million multi-fight partnership with Salita Promotions and Wynn Records, the music agency that houses her boyfriend, Papoose. The 30-year-old pound-for-pound queen of women’s boxing toyed with free agency, but ultimately decided to stay loyal to Dmitriy Salita, her first—and only—promoter. And now, she’s making history as the first athlete signed to Wynn Records, bridging the worlds of music and boxing in a major flex.

    Fans had expected Shields to chase bigger payday fights, but she recently had social media buzzing after clips from her latest freestyle surfaced online. The undisputed champ brought her bars to BET’s new ‘106 & Sports’ series, and baby, she didn’t come to play. Hopping straight into her GWOAT bag, Claressa proved she brings the same heat to her raps as she does to the ring—flexing with lines like, “I be on that Master P, my credit card ain’t got no limit!” Additionally, Shields’ camp hasn’t revealed how many fights the deal includes or who she’ll face next, but she’s officially set to return to the ring in early 2026. And let’s just say, the boxing—and music—world are bracing for impact.

    Wynn Gets Candid About Claressa Shields Signing (EXCLUSIVE)

    RELATED: Oop! Claressa Shields Calls Laila Ali “Scared, Old & Bitter&” After Ex-Boxer Declared She Won’t Be Coming Out Of Retirement (VIDEO)

    What Do You Think Roomies?

    Desjah

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  • Lyles makes Olympic 200-meter final despite finishing second in semifinal qualifying race

    Lyles makes Olympic 200-meter final despite finishing second in semifinal qualifying race

    Noah Lyles has said when people see the race, they know something special is about to happen and he didn’t disappoint in the men’s 100 m finals with *** photo finish. It’s *** personal best for Lyles in 9.72 seconds in *** race that came down to 5000 th of *** second. His teammate Fred Curly wins bronze, his second Olympic medal in the 100 m. Lyles is the first American man to win gold in the 100 m since Justin Gatlin at the 2004 Athens games. Everybody thought that this was going to be *** slow year for the 100 but here we are proving that it wasn’t. This race came down to 5, 1/1000 of *** second. I mean, that’s maddening how small that is. How much of that is the energy of this crowd. I feel like it definitely got in tune with the energy. But at the end of the day, we all train for these moments like this and you can’t take it away from nobody. I think it’s hard being the world’s this man will try being his mom. We talked to her just minutes before her son raced. I told him that he was born for such *** time as this, this moment was created for him. I told him to have fun that we love you, but he already knows that and just go out there and do what you do next up. It’s the men’s 200 m prelims that’s coming up Monday night, Paris time at the Paris Olympics. I’m Deirdre Fitzpatrick.

    Lyles makes Olympic 200-meter final despite finishing second in semifinal qualifying race

    Noah Lyles will race for his second Olympic gold medal despite finishing second Wednesday in the 200-meter semifinal, his first loss at that distance in three years. Letsile Tebogo of Botswana finished the heat in 19.96 seconds, beating Lyles by .12 and marking the first time the American has lost a 200 of any kind since he finished third at the Tokyo Games.It opened up a 24-hour period to debate and discuss the meaning of the second-place finish, which still earned Lyles an automatic qualifying spot in Thursday night’s final but could have him running the curve from a less-than-ideal lane.Last weekend, Lyles notably lost both his opening heat and the semifinal round of the 100, before coming back to eke out a .005-second victory over Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in the final. That win came about 90 minutes after another Jamaican, Oblique Seville, beat him in the semifinal for that sprint.Lyles, normally a regular in the interview room with reporters, even after early rounds, skipped it this time and team officials said he had headed to the medical tent. Asked if Lyles was OK, his coach, Lance Brauman, told The Associated Press: “He’s fine.”Some things to consider:—Was Tebogo, a world bronze medalist with the third-best time of 2024, trying to send a message, and if so, did he burn too much energy trying to make his point? He finished in 19.96 for the only sub-20 run of the night.—Was Lyles taking it easy, even after conceding he had been a bit unprepared for the challenges he would face in the early rounds after opening the Games with a second-place finish in the 100 meters?—Or might this fuel Lyles, who does not take kindly to being messed with in his favorite race?Video above: Noah Lyles’ mom shares her Olympic journey as her son makes historyAmong those waiting for him in the final will be Kenny Bednarek, the American who came within .06 of Lyles earlier this summer at Olympic trials. Also, Erryion Knighton, the 20-year-old American who was long seen as Lyles’ next, big threat but whose only victories over Lyles came in the opening rounds of the 2021 Olympic trials.The defending champion, Andre De Grasse of Canada, finished third in his heat and did not advance.

    Noah Lyles will race for his second Olympic gold medal despite finishing second Wednesday in the 200-meter semifinal, his first loss at that distance in three years.

    Letsile Tebogo of Botswana finished the heat in 19.96 seconds, beating Lyles by .12 and marking the first time the American has lost a 200 of any kind since he finished third at the Tokyo Games.

    It opened up a 24-hour period to debate and discuss the meaning of the second-place finish, which still earned Lyles an automatic qualifying spot in Thursday night’s final but could have him running the curve from a less-than-ideal lane.

    Last weekend, Lyles notably lost both his opening heat and the semifinal round of the 100, before coming back to eke out a .005-second victory over Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in the final. That win came about 90 minutes after another Jamaican, Oblique Seville, beat him in the semifinal for that sprint.

    Lyles, normally a regular in the interview room with reporters, even after early rounds, skipped it this time and team officials said he had headed to the medical tent. Asked if Lyles was OK, his coach, Lance Brauman, told The Associated Press: “He’s fine.”

    Some things to consider:

    —Was Tebogo, a world bronze medalist with the third-best time of 2024, trying to send a message, and if so, did he burn too much energy trying to make his point? He finished in 19.96 for the only sub-20 run of the night.

    —Was Lyles taking it easy, even after conceding he had been a bit unprepared for the challenges he would face in the early rounds after opening the Games with a second-place finish in the 100 meters?

    —Or might this fuel Lyles, who does not take kindly to being messed with in his favorite race?

    Video above: Noah Lyles’ mom shares her Olympic journey as her son makes history

    Among those waiting for him in the final will be Kenny Bednarek, the American who came within .06 of Lyles earlier this summer at Olympic trials. Also, Erryion Knighton, the 20-year-old American who was long seen as Lyles’ next, big threat but whose only victories over Lyles came in the opening rounds of the 2021 Olympic trials.

    The defending champion, Andre De Grasse of Canada, finished third in his heat and did not advance.

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  • Ledecky wins record 13th medal with a silver in relay event

    Ledecky wins record 13th medal with a silver in relay event

    American swimmer Katie Ledecky uses *** truly dominating performance to win her first gold here at the Paris Olympics and to make history set an Olympic record with *** time of 1532 in the 1500 m race. She has now lost in 14 years. The decisive win also allows her to match the record for most Olympic medals ever won by *** woman with 12. She is also now tied with swimmer Jenny Thompson’s record for the most Olympic gold medals by an American woman with eight and we’re not done yet. Ledecky is the first female swimmer to win gold at four different Olympic Games named among that group. I mean, so many swimmers that I looked up to for so many years that have gotten me to this moment. So at the moment, I am trying to take it all in. So um definitely enjoying tonight and trying to soak in on every little bit of it. Um but once the once the week is over, I’ll really be to process it all and Ledecky still has *** chance at more goals in more history as she said to race in the 800 m at the Paris Olympics. I’m Fletcher Mackel.

    With a silver in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay Thursday night, Ledecky collected the 13th medal of her stellar career to become the most decorated female in swimming history.She would’ve preferred it to be gold, but that went to an Australian squad led by gold medalists Mollie O’Callaghan and Ariarne Titmus.Still, in her next-to-last event of these games, Ledecky broke the mark she shared with fellow Americans Dara Torres, Natalie Coughlin and Jenny Thompson. The 27-year-old now has eight golds, four silvers and one bronze over four Olympics, with every intention of swimming on to Los Angeles in 2028.Ledecky has one more event, the 800 freestyle. She’s the favorite for her fourth straight gold at that distance.

    With a silver in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay Thursday night, Ledecky collected the 13th medal of her stellar career to become the most decorated female in swimming history.

    She would’ve preferred it to be gold, but that went to an Australian squad led by gold medalists Mollie O’Callaghan and Ariarne Titmus.

    Still, in her next-to-last event of these games, Ledecky broke the mark she shared with fellow Americans Dara Torres, Natalie Coughlin and Jenny Thompson. The 27-year-old now has eight golds, four silvers and one bronze over four Olympics, with every intention of swimming on to Los Angeles in 2028.

    Ledecky has one more event, the 800 freestyle. She’s the favorite for her fourth straight gold at that distance.

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  • Metrolink will shut down all lines the day after Christmas. Here's why

    Metrolink will shut down all lines the day after Christmas. Here's why

    The entire Metrolink regional commuter rail system will be shut down at the end of December for four days. You have the Olympics to thank for that.

    The agency announced a systemwide shutdown — all seven lines plus the Arrow service, connecting downtown San Bernardino to Redlands — from Dec. 26, a Tuesday, through Friday the 29th for repairs, cleaning and upgrades.

    Regular train service is scheduled to resume on Dec. 30, a Saturday. This planned work will help “provide safer, more efficient service,” according to Metrolink, which is thinking ahead to big-time international events Los Angeles is hosting including the 2028 Olympics. There’s also the accompanying Paralympics and the 2026 World Cup (perhaps), not to mention the Superbowl.

    December’s shutdown culminates a three-year project to modernize the system’s central hub, Union Station, said Justin Fornelli, Metrolink’s chief of program delivery, in a news release.

    The work includes replacing signal relay technology that is about as old as Union Station itself. The update is a safety boost and will allow Metrolink to run multiple trains on multiple tracks as they enter and depart Union Station, the agency says.

    Union Station opened with a “massive parade down Alameda Street” on May 3, 1939, according to the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Metrolink began 53 years later, on Oct. 26,1992, offering three routes, the Ventura County Line, the San Bernardino Line and the Santa Clarita Line. Today, Metrolink’s seven lines plus the passenger rail service Arrow all have connections to Union Station and Metro subway and light rail — services that should be essential to Angelenos, athletes and tourists during the upcoming Olympics, as well as other events.

    Los Angeles held the Summer Olympics at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 1984, when 6,829 athletes from 140 countries competed. A total 650,000 visiting athletes and spectators made their way around Los Angeles.

    The next Los Angeles Olympics is expected to more than double the number of participating athletes, at 15,000, and the crowds of spectators are also expected to balloon.

    Metrolink’s improvements are funded by the Southern California Optimized Rail Expansion program.

    Union Station will undergo additional maintenance and facelift projects during the shutdown — restoring concrete platforms, renewing paint, cleaning canopies and gutters, and performing tuneups on high-voltage sources to reduce the possibility of power outages.

    On the Antelope Valley Line, Metrolink will replace rail that’s reached the end of its service life; the older rail on the curvy route necessitate “slow orders,” which caused passenger delays. The San Bernardino Line will see new culverts for diverting rainwater and storm runoff underneath the tracks to prevent flash flooding.

    During the four-day service outage, Metrolink is not providing any alternative forms of transportation. It has a list of some suggested options. The Amtrak Pacific Surfliner will continue to run Dec. 26-29 on a modified schedule. Pacific Surfliner trains will not be affected by the Metrolink service suspension.

    “As a leader of transportation here in Southern California, we’re excited that we will be upgrading our signal system,” Jeanette Flores, Metrolink assistant director of public affairs, told The Times. “We are working on [projects] across multiple lines to deliver the safest, most reliable passenger rail experience for our community. So this is an exciting time for us and we’re very blessed that we have great community support.”

    Flores reminds people to take advantage of free train rides to all students when the four-day suspension has been lifted. “Students can ride for free in any of our trains within our system,” she noted. “We’re trying to encourage the next generation of riders to prioritize the environment, get off the freeways and take our … very clean system.”

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  • Statue of controversial USC founder removed from campus

    Statue of controversial USC founder removed from campus

    A statue of a USC founder — whose connection to groups that carried out extralegal lynchings raised questions about the statue’s placement — was removed last month for routine maintenance, university officials said.

    Judge Robert Widney was one of USC’s founders, and since 2014 an 8-foot bronze statue of him had stood outside the Widney Alumni House.

    In an Instagram post, the Daily Trojan reported that Widney’s statue and the plaque were taken down Nov. 28.

    In an emailed statement, the university said the statue was removed for “maintenance and cleaning” but did not answer a question on whether it would be returned.

    Like many institutions, USC was met with reinvigorated calls to purge its namesake sites tied to racist figures — which included university founders, presidents and athletics coaches — after a police officer murdered George Floyd on camera in 2020. The fury and protests over the killing strengthened a nationwide movement to remove symbols or names associated with racism in public spaces and on school campuses. Monuments, statues and buildings were toppled, dismantled or renamed as organizations, schools and cities reckoned with their pasts.

    In June 2020, after years of demands for the university to take action, USC removed the Von KleinSmid Center for International and Public Affairs, which was named after Rufus B. von KleinSmid, the university’s fifth president.He was also a leading figure in California’s eugenics movement.
    A bust of Von KleinSmid was also removed from campus after a unanimous vote from the board of trustees’ executive committee.

    In 2021, the building was renamed in honor of Joseph Medicine Crow, a Native American alumnus who wrote influential works about Indigenous history and culture.

    Over the summer, the university renamed the field at the Trojans’ track stadium in honor of athlete and alumna Allyson Felix, the most decorated American track and field athlete in Olympics history. The space had previously been named after Dean Cromwell, a former USC track coach who was criticized for anti-Black views and antisemitic actions.

    But the statue of Widney had remained. According to USC, Widney is one of the four founding fathers of the school, and he had outsize influence on its growth in the late 1870s.

    But Widney was also tied to the Home Guard Vigilance Committee in the late 1800s. At the time, vigilante groups in Los Angeles often targeted Native Americans and people of color, according to multiple historians.

    A professor and historian at UC Merced told The Times in 2020 that Robert Widney was “most certainly” supportive of extralegal lynchings. Widney’s statue came under sharper scrutiny after the university stripped Von KleinSmid’s name from the landmark building.

    Widney’s brother, Joseph Widney, was USC’s second president. He expressed racist views in his writing, including that Black and white people “cannot live together as equals.” Historian Torres-Rouff described the racial beliefs Joseph Widney espoused in his book as “repugnant,” citing them in a 2018 article asking universities “to confront their past, not omit it.”

    Times staff writer Tomás Mier contributed to this report.

    Alexandra E. Petri

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  • Protest stops play during U.S. Open semi-final match between Gauff, Muchová

    Protest stops play during U.S. Open semi-final match between Gauff, Muchová

    Karolina Muchova of Czech Republic and Coco Gauff of the United States walk to their benches during their Women’s Singles Semifinal match on Day Eleven of the 2023 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 07, 2023 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City.

    Elsa | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    Play between Coco Gauff and Karolína Muchová during a U.S. Open match was stopped Thursday after an environmental protester “glued his feet to the cement floor,” an announcer said.

    The match between Gauff, of the United States, and Muchová, of Czechia, was delayed for around 40 minutes.

    There were three environmental protesters in all in an upper area, Stacey Allaster, tournament director, said in an interview during coverage of the sporting event.

    Two of those protesters left quietly without incident, she said.

    “When security got there they found that one of the protesters had physically glued themselves in their bare feet to the cement floor,” Allaster said.

    Gauff and Muchová took a seat during the delay. An announcer described it as a protest in the “far reaches” of the stadium.

    The match between the two players was at the Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York, which has 24,000 seats.

    “NYPD are in the process of resolving a fan disturbance. Play will resume as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience,” U.S. Open Tennis tweeted.

    The protester was removed, and play has resumed.

    Police said the incident happened shortly after 8 p.m., and an investigation is ongoing. A person was taken into custody without incident, police said, but their name was not immediately released.

    “We know in these large events, environmental protesters use the platform,” Allaster said. “Certainly, security will be resuming, along with NYPD, to see what else we can do to prevent it in the future.”

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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  • Nike’s approach to solving the biggest problem for girls in sports

    Nike’s approach to solving the biggest problem for girls in sports

    Portland Press Herald | Portland Press Herald | Getty Images

    In recent decades, data from sports researchers revealed an encouraging trend: young girls were participating in sports in greater numbers. But the research also uncovered a big missed opportunity. Girls drop out of sports at “alarming rates,” specifically when they hit puberty.

    There is one obvious solution that sports retail giant Nike CEO John Donahoe, and many others, think can make a big difference: more female coaches.

    In the historically male-dominated world of sports, girls and women have always had to fight for their right to compete and to be viewed as competitive athletes. The sexism that has prevented girls from competing in sports has also prevented women from becoming youth coaches.

    “I think league administrators are kind of trained to look for dads to coach and think more often the dads are going to be the ones to step up and do it. I think sometimes they may not even be trying to recruit females,” said Mary Fry, professor and director of the University of Kansas Sport & Exercise Psychology Lab.

    Nearly 75% of youth head coaches are men, according to Aspen Institute’s Project Play. Even when women are offered the opportunity to coach, they are fearful that they’re not good enough to take on such a position because of the sexist stereotypes society often promotes.

    When Jen Welter, the first-ever female NFL coach and a two-time gold medalist in Olympic football, was offered the opportunity to coach football for the first time, she recalled instinctively thinking “girls don’t do that.”

    “When you don’t see it, it’s really hard to say, ‘You know what, I can do that,’” Welter said.

    “Most young people rarely, if ever, get the opportunity to be coached by a woman. This is a miss for all,” said Vanessa Garcia-Brito, Nike vice president, and chief social and community impact officer. “To get girls active and invite them into a lifetime of sport, they have to see it to believe it – and that starts with more female coaches.”

    In March, Nike launched Coaching HER in a partnership with the University of Minnesota’s Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport. The digital coaching resource is designed to help coaches of all genders improve their understanding of gendered bias and discrimination in sports.

    Puberty changes girls’ relationship with sport

    Female coaches are not just important in terms of giving young girls a positive role model – they also offer a safe space to discuss and process the difficulties that can come with a young woman’s changing body and mind. Even for girls who grew up loving sports, puberty shifts girls’ relationship with sports and very often results in them disengaging with physical activity.

    The data related to this critical period in a girl’s life is clear. One in three girls participate in a sport from age 6-12, according to the Aspen Institute. But nearly one in two girls will quit sports during puberty, according to menstrual product manufacturer Always.

    Research from a 2018 report by Tucker Center, Nike’s partner, gathered data globally and found that the highest rate of drop-off from girls in sports often occurs between the ages of 11 to 17, “the range when girls feel the most pressured to conform to identities shaped by their peers and adults — which includes coaches,” its report states, and it concluded that how girls feels about their coaches is a determining factor in whether they continue to play organized sports.

    The Women’s Sports Foundation, created by Billie Jean King, has found that 40% of teen girls are not actively participating in a sport.

    “For boys, that moving through puberty can be kind of a plus, you gain more muscle mass, and you get taller, stronger. For girls, it’s just not always the same case,” Fry said. “They’re kind of in survival mode in middle school.”

    There are both physical and psychological dimensions to the problem, namely, periods and low body confidence as barriers preventing girls from continuing in sports, according to Youth Sport Trust CEO Alison Oliver. As girls’ bodies change throughout puberty, they become increasingly insecure and physical activity begins to feel different. The charity Women in Sport found that 65% of girls don’t like others watching them during sports, as it makes them feel self-conscious, vulnerable, and objectified. What’s more, seven in 10 girls avoid being active when on their period.

    Coaches are critical agents that impact girls’ experiences in sports, according to the Women’s Sports Foundation, and if a girl isn’t properly supported or understood by their coach in a time as daunting as puberty, they’re going to be discouraged to compete. For example, most of the time, girls are not educated on or fitted for proper sports bras, making participating in sports painful.

    “If you started to feel uncomfortable as a female athlete … it’d be pretty tough to go to a male coach about some of those things,” Welter said.

    A June 2019 Nike event in London when it took over iconic recreational sports park Hackney Marshes for a football festival to celebrate the women’s game, hosting more than 1,000 women and girls, with 79 teams taking part in the tournament, across different age groups.

    Kate Mcshane | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    “These bonds that develop between a coach or a mentor and the kids is just so much bigger than just the physical activity part of it,” Fry said. “They have women in their lives they can bounce things off of, they can trust.”

    Fry co-founded the Strong Girls program at the University of Kansas, where young girls are assigned a female college student as their mentor. Half of the program focuses on participating in sports together, while the other half concentrates on positive youth development. The program typically attracts girls who tend to be less athletic and creates a safe environment where they feel encouraged by female mentors to participate in sports that they normally wouldn’t pursue.

    “Girls and women can’t have enough strong women in their lives. We just benefit from that,” said Fry, who is director of the program.

    Female coaches were fundamental to both the success and enjoyment of sports for Christina Collins, a former youth athlete who later became a coach. “I had female coaches, as well as male, of course, and it [had] such an impact on me to realize that it was an option for me to grow up and do that. And I felt like I definitely connected with them at a deeper level than I might have [with] male coaches that I had,” said Collins, who is now a physical education and health teacher in Westchester County, and a professor in the physical education masters program at Manhattanville College.  

    Female coaches, she says, can offer unique insight based upon their own personal experiences as women. “[My identity] has impacted the way in which I deliver all coaching. It is meant to increase first and foremost the child’s confidence, then second, their performance ability,” said Collins, who also is founder and owner of NeverStopMoving365, a company that seeks to use sports and physical activity to promote confidence and teach life lessons. 

    She says this approach isn’t only benefit to girls, but extends to youth athletes of all genders, and female coaches as well. 

    Nike’s 20,000 female coach goal

    Nike is one of the few major companies directly addressing this issue. Corporations from Target to Disney and Bank of America are being targeted for taking a stand on social issues in the current divisive political climate. Donahoe, who made his comments on the issue of girls’ sports participation rate at the recent CNBC CEO Council Summit in Santa Barbara, California, said that he believes Disney CEO Bob Iger is handling the feud with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis properly, and he pointed to Nike’s efforts in girls’ youth sports as another example of how a company can focus on social issues that are core to its values and integral to its brand.

    “We’re trying to train 20,000 female coaches, moms and other former athletes to be coaches to promote youth,” Donahoe said. “So that’s less of a controversial issue, but it’s one we care about as a value,” he said. 

    Nike also has an aim to achieve 50% girl participation in the sport-based community programs it supports by 2025.

    As a former athlete, Collins says there are lifelong benefits that come when young women and girls remain involved with sports and feel supported.  

    “I don’t use the actual sports as my primary form of fitness, or just the sports skills in general at all. But I pull from my toolkit of life lessons that athletics taught me,” she said. 

    Coaching HER encourages all coaches, regardless of gender, to give girls the chance to continue developing their character and learning life lessons from sport, and offers detailed training for coaches on how to lead girls and young women in sports.

    “It’s not just women, for women. It’s women and men working together to elevate girls. That’s one of the key components. How do we work better together?” Welter said.

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  • Owen-Withee, WIAA disagree on what caused team to miss out on post-season

    Owen-Withee, WIAA disagree on what caused team to miss out on post-season









    The pandemic, students getting jobs, other hobbies and losing interest, on the first day of football practice in 2020 Owen-Withee’s had just 13 athletes show up.

    After the 2019 season, they made the tough decision to take their football program down to the 8-man division, with the school administration filing the paperwork in November of 2020.

    They knew they would have to serve a two-year playoff ban, but were told they’d be eligible to play in the postseason in 2022.

    Over a year later, that statement was retracted.

    “I don’t know where things ultimately got switched, changed, whatever,” said Terry Laube, long-time Blackhawk head coach. “We feel we had done everything she asked us to do and we’re all good to go and all of the sudden the rug gets pulled from under us.”

    With documentation from the WIAA stating they’d be playoff eligible in 2022, the school took the decision to appeals.

    The WIAA effectively ruled it was a clerical error, made by a former employee.

    Not counting the 2019 season, the Blackhawks competed in junior-varsity season as a varsity sit out, however, it wouldn’t count to their two-year playoff ban, as the school had originally interpreted.

    “I’ve had the great fortune to coach for 34 years,” said Laube. “I don’t think I’ve ever been gut shot like this before. We have to go in and have to look 22 boys in the eyes and say, ‘I’m so sorry, you know what our appeal was denied’.”

    The error, made by a now retired WIAA official, was conveyed to the school over email, with WIAA Executive Director Stephanie Hauser, and other elected officials included. However, the correction of the error wasn’t caught until nearly a year later in September 2021.

    Although the WIAA admitted to the error, they said it comes down to what is written in the rulebook in place.

    “Every conversation we have in this office, when it comes to eligibility, it comes down to finding a way it can be done within the membership’s rules that have been voted on and implemented to find a way to make either schools programs, or individuals eligible for our tournament series,” said WIAA Director of Communications Todd Clark.

    “It’s pretty clear what the season regulations call for in a situation like this, and that’s why from a staff and a board perspective, we weren’t able to just ignore the rule.”

    Now, Owen-Withee, who is ranked third in the state in 8-man, will have their season end Friday with no trip to the postseason for the third consecutive year.

    “You know people make decisions that truly you don’t understand,” Laube said. “Life isn’t fair all the time, I guess. That’s it, life isn’t fair and a great lesson for them.”

    “We all have opportunities to make mistakes in our lives,” continued Laube. “To just acknowledge those mistakes and then say, ‘”in the best interest of the student athletes, this is what we need to do, we need to allow them to go ahead and experience the playoffs.’”

    Owen-Withee, 7-0, will conclude its season Friday against the also undefeated Thorp Cardinals.

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