Yes, you, Peter Ueberroth, and you, Craig Masback. In the past 30-odd years, the very admirable idea of Title
IX has been twisted into a form that threatens the future of
the United States' performance in the Olympic Games.
Since the enactment of Title IX in 1972, and the
bureaucratic promulgation of "guidelines" which have
gradually hardened into fiat law, university after university
has dropped participation in a number of men's varsity
sports, citing Title IX as the reason.
The worst hits have been taken by men's wrestling and
gymnastics. More than 400 collegiate wrestling teams have
been discontinued, and according to the NCAA only 17
Division One men's gymnastics programs are still
competing. Seventeen!
Track and field and swimming have also been hard hit.
Among the men's swimming programs dropped are UCLA
and Miami, which between them have produced 27 Olympic
medals. The scores of major discontinued men's track
programs include Southern Methodist, Bowling Green, West
Virginia, Western Michigan--and most recently Ohio
University and James Madison.
Since 1896, United States athletes have won a total of
2,089 Olympic medals. More than ha1f, 1,095, have been
won by male athletes in just four sports--men's track and
field (605 medals), men's gymnastics (58), men's
swimming and diving (316), and wrestling (116)--the very
sports that have suffered the most from the restructuring of
collegiate sports brought about by the current Title IX "rules."
If that isn't a crisis for the USOC, what is? Where is the
USOC going to be if the four sports that have won 52.4% of
all U.S. Olympic medals go out of business?
The James Madison announcement brought a strong
reaction from Equity in Athletics, a non-profit organization
which seeks to change the rules which universities say is
the reason why so many men's programs have been
chopped.
Equity in Athletics is doing something about the
crisis--suing the U.S. Department of Education to get those
rules changed.
I believe that you, Peter Ueberroth, and you, Craig Masback
should be doing something, too.
First, you and the leaders of every NGB involved with an
Olympic sport must recognize that this is a crisis. Get it off
the back burner and start thinking about ways to solve the
problem.
Second, USOC and USATF should take an interest in the
Equity in Athletics lawsuit. EIA has taken a different legal
route from the prior Title IX cases that have failed, and the
USOC and all the NGBs ought to have their lawyers study
the approach EIA has taken and file strongly supportive
amicus curiae briefs.
If you don't do something about Title IX, it sure as hell will
do something about you.
-- James Dunaway