Jackie Robinson - Baseball and Title IX
The baseball world recently celebrated “Jackie Robinson Day.” On April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African-American to play Major League Baseball when he stepped onto Ebbets Field as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Many commentators have lamented the fact that 60 years after Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier, today, only 8.4% of Major League Baseball (MLB) players are black. In fact, MLB has been going backwards. The current percentage of black players is the lowest in more than 20 years. Just over a decade ago, in 1995, 19% of MLB players were black.
No one disputes that the numbers of black professional baseball players is declining, the controversy is over why.
...the shot. Toski's second-shot technique improves shotmaking and injects more consistency in your game. It also builds confidence because you begin to recognize how it feels hitting the ball from the fairway all the time. In addition, it teaches you ...
Others have argued that inner-city black athletes face various economic challenges that limit their access to baseball fields, equipment, etc.
All of these arguments have some merit to them. But, ultimately, they fall short because other sports, like football and basketball, share baseball’s legacy of segregation and racism. Yet, black participation in those other sports has continued to grow.
Last week, a co-worker sent me an article about Title IX by Hubert Mizell of Gainesville.com. It hit me like a
..."golf instruction online". So, if you do a search and these sites appear, you'll know a little about them before you take the time to jump over and make a visit. Again, we're not an affiliate of these sites but ...
The way Title IX has been interpreted and implemented, it effectively restricts the number of baseball scholarships colleges and universities offer. In fact, most schools, even major schools like the University of Florida, do not offer any “full-ride” college baseball scholarships at all.
I was shocked when I found that out.
Obviously, without a scholarship, many, many young black athletes cannot afford to go to college and play college baseball or, later, professional baseball. Naturally, young black athletes will gravitate towards football and basketball; sports that offer more scholarships. Over the past generation, this shift has become pronounced.
Title IX
...golf is one of the most preferred games, there are also several other games that are similar to golf or which just share the name. They are: golf (card game), golf solitaire, Kolven, farmers golf, miniature golf, Golf Trivia Hangman ...
So, Title IX prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex. It applies to discrimination in athletics. So far, so good. The problem comes in the interpretation of the law.
In 1979, The U.S. Department of Heath, Education, and Welfare (this was before we had a separate “Department of Education”) issued a policy interpreting Title IX. The policy provided
...golf game suffers you can find personalized information. There are also helpful information about stance, follow through of an effective swing and the finer points of swing analysis. Online golf lessons can even include time and effort geared toward the ...
1. Provides athletic opportunities substantially proportionate to student enrollment; or,
2. Demonstrates a continual expansion of athletic opportunities for the underrepresented gender; or,
3. Provides full and effective accommodation of the interest and ability of the underrepresented gender.
Many schools try to comply with Title IX by passing the third test. The problem is that this test is very subjective. How do you prove you are providing “full and effective accommodation of interest and ability .?” You can take surveys to get some gauge of interest. But, in the end, if
...must relax your muscles to drive an efficient swing. A tense body will do the opposite. Some golfers have flabby and weak muscles, which make them physically unprepared for an effective swing. Therefore, you will achieve bad results on the ...
Some of the larger, financially strong, schools comply with Title IX by meeting the second test. They “demonstrate a continual expansion of athletic opportunities for the underrepresented gender” by adding a women’s sports team. Every time a school does that, it is “good to go” for about five years. But, adding new sports is a money-losing proposition and smaller, less affluent, schools can’t afford to do that. At least, not forever.
So, ultimately, all schools will want, or need, to comply with Title IX by meeting the first test. And, it is
...is a hybrid. Many golfers have used this club to replace the three-iron. Tour players are even switching to this club. Hybrids to check out include the Taylormade Rescue Mid (which continues to dominate the market and is found in ...
If a school has a Division I football team, it can award up to 85 football scholarships (per NCAA rules). The school can also award up to 13 scholarships for it’s men’s basketball team. Of course, to compete in these sports, at the Division I level, the school will have to award these 98 men’s athletics scholarships.
Women now make up a whopping 58% of college enrollment. So, to pass the first test, and award scholarships “substantially proportionate” to student enrollment, the school has to award about 110 scholarships to women just to equal the scholarships provided for men’s football and basketball.
And, when you add in other
...in the To line. Show your reader who the email newsletter is for by putting your donor s name and email address in the To line. Don t leave this line blank. That s what spammers do, and you don ...
So, that’s exactly what schools do. When you look at sports like Tennis, Golf, Track and Field/Cross Country, Swimming/Diving there are more scholarships awarded to women than men in each of these sports. Even in basketball men’s college basketball teams get 13 scholarships; women’s teams get 15.
Wrestling is one of the biggest sports at most high schools. There is a large base of college wrestling fans. But, thanks to Title IX, there are few college wrestling scholarships.
James Madison University is the latest school to
...range, and even bought the latest, greatest titanium drive; and yet still can t play like they think they are capable of. Finding out your physical limitations is the first step to a lifelong better game of golf. Once you ...
You might say: “well, they should just get rid of football.” The problem with that idea is that football is the only college sport that makes money. Men’s basketball about breaks even (if the school is lucky). No other college sport pays for itself.
This means the college will likely lose money on every other sports team it adds, including every women’s sports team. Football is the bill-payer for many of these sports at many schools. So, getting rid of football is not the answer.
So, what does all this
...U.S. Open Championships being held the most recently at the course. - Located in Pinehurst, North Carolina is the Pinehurst Resort and Country Club. This historic golfing locale has been around since 1895, and features 8 separate golf courses, allowing ...
Here’s what.
Because of the way Title IX has been interpreted and implemented, college baseball programs are only allowed 11.7 scholarships. Since about 30 players are on a college baseball team, normally, no one gets a full scholarship.
So, baseball is becoming, increasingly, a sport for the relatively affluent. The reason is simple. You have to be able to afford to pay for college to play college baseball.
By contrast, in football and basketball, almost everyone on the team has a full scholarship.
For a young, black athlete, football and basketball offer a much more likely scholarship opportunity. It’s not surprising,
...are preserved with pride. Sarasota County includes Venice, Northport, Longboat and Siesta Keys. A scarcity of land coupled with increasing land values led to a considerable increase in real estate prices in Sarasota. Yet, prices are a bargain when compared ...
It’s ironic that, Title IX, a law intended to limit sex discrimination in athletics, has morphed into, perhaps, the most significant cause of sex, race and class discrimination in college athletics today.
It’s time to significantly change Title IX.
Mo Johnson is a graduate of the University of Tennessee and a long-time SEC sports fan. He is publisher of SEC Sports Fan. If interested in Southeastern Conference Baseball, check out SEC Baseball.














1.Assissotom said …
hi.. just droppin’ by your site.. it’s really cute… nice work!