You're right, I apologize - I was way off with that figure. Female high school athletes comprise a little over 40% of the total. That notwithstanding, again - women's athletics would not exist if not for men's football and basketball.
quote:
I refuse to accept the idea that sports should only exist if they can pay for themselves.
I agree, but I also refuse to accept the idea that sports that can pay for themselves (and help pay for others) should count against the total for the teams being subsidized. What I mean is that even if it is a financial issue, I don't think it's fair to penalize "minor" men's sports and to indemnify women's sports when cutting budgets.
You're right, the minor sports fit the ideal of a student-athlete much more so than do major football and basketball that have basically become semi-pro...the flip side is that sports like softball get to have great equipment and travel across the country simply because football generates the revenue for them to do so. Without football, even with Title IX you would have volleyball teams wearing the same unis for 3 seasons and traveling by bus to schools within 250 miles of campus (like club teams or high school teams).
If we can agree that football is the main revenue generator, then lets not even count it in the equation. I think it would be more fair to not count the sports that generate enough revenue to sustain themselves against the sum of the scholarships and to let athletic departments split the extra money down the middle for the remaining mens and womens sports.
The thing is, women's sports will, other than rare instances like UT or UConn basketball, not be revenue-generating sports. You can make equal opportunity for women but you still can't make fans care - not even female fans! If the 41% chunk of female high school participants grew up into women that cared about sports, supported their alma maters women's programs, and attended women's pro sporting events then the WUSA wouldn't have folded, the WNBA wouldn't need to be subsidized by the NBA, and there would be a much greater attendance at women's NCAA sporting events.
[This message has been edited by Harry Dunne (edited 5/15/2008 8:34p).]