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As Title IX readies to turn 40, 
legacy goes beyond the numbers

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Marzonie may have learned these skills through soccer, but she’ll use them long after her playing career is over.

“Any situation, I could relate to soccer,” she said. “It’s nice to revert back to something I’m comfortable with in an uncomfortable situation.”

It’s not just women whose mindset has changed over these last 40 years. Boys have grown up watching sisters, friends, classmates, even their mothers play sports, and the distinction between an “athlete” and a “female athlete” has faded. All four of tennis’ Grand Slam tournaments pay equal prize money to the men’s and women’s winners. Last year’s Women’s World Cup final between the United States and Japan earned the highest television rating for any soccer game on an ESPN network.

Not only is Notre Dame guard Skylar Diggins the highest rated college player on Tweetscenter’s most recent “Power Rankings and Swag Index,” at No. 6 she’s one spot above Kevin Durant. Diggins’ jersey may as well be the uniform at Irish coach Muffet McGraw’s summer basketball camps — for both girls and boys.

“It’s rewarding to look at that and see they have such great respect for (Diggins) and what she’s accomplished,” McGraw said. “They don’t care she’s a girl, they just know she can play.”

For all the strides female athletes have made, however, the playing field is not yet even. Women typically make up more than half of the student population, but were only 43 percent of the athletes last year, according to the NCAA. A 2007 study found that female athletes had received only 35 percent of total athletic expenditures in 2004-05. In the latest update of their “Women in Intercollegiate Sport” study, R. Vivian Acosta and Linda Jean Carpenter found there were 215 female athletic directors at NCAA schools in 2012. But only 36 were in Division I, and less than 5 percent of those were at Football Bowl Subdivision schools, the power brokers in collegiate sports.

And even though Title IX has been upheld by the courts time and again, it remains a matter of debate in the court of public opinion. There was a net loss of 300 men’s teams in Division I between 1988-89 and 2009-10, according to the NCAA, and Title IX is often blamed for the cuts. Never mind that there’s nothing in the legislation about cutting men’s teams to create opportunities for women. Or that the huge size — and expense — of football squads creates an inherent imbalance.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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