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In the Race

Now, here, you see, it takes all the blogging I can do to keep in the same place.
If I want to get somewhere else, I must blog twice as fast as that!
You see, I'm in the Red Queen's Race...

Inequity and Liquid Green

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 29 2007, 01:30 PM

Growing up, I had always had an interest in running, and in Phy. Ed. classes I was pretty fast, beating all the girls, and sometimes even one or two of the guys when I was really young. 

In the early 70’s I went to high school in southern Florida.  At that time, almost all Varsity sports where boys sports.  Any girl’s sports were those such as Cheerleading, Field Hockey, and I don’t know, maybe dodge ball . . . There were no girl’s competitive track and field sports.
 

When I was in 10th grade I approached the Varsity Cross Country Coach and said I wanted to be on the team, even if it meant just to practice with them.  I received a flat “No.”  So, I lost interest in running.  The following year, I approached him again.  He seemed more interested, but again, “No.” 

Finally, when I was a Senior, Title IX was passed.  It was the first time I had actually realized I had been discriminated against for being a female.  I know I had been angry that I couldn’t do a simple thing - I  just wanted to run in a sport.  It wasn’t a contact sport.  Finally we could have a Girls Cross Country and Track Team!  The coach approached me!  Sure two years of doing nothing but riding a bike about five miles a day, and tanning on the beach while I could have been in great shape by now.  But I said yes.   

There were few Girls Cross Country teams formed in southern Florida that first year.  My team consisted of me, a 17 year old, and one other girl, a freshman, who was a great runner and would have been bumped up to Varsity even if she hadn’t been.  You couldn’t have only one girl on a team! 

My school wasn’t happy about Title IX, and did not push for any new girls sports.
 We trained with the boys after school and on weekends (we couldn't keep up at first and we were a distraction running in our bikini tops - hey, it was hot). Our school was so not accepting of a girls program that it wouldn’t give us official uniforms and we sat outside the locker room, angry,  while the boys had team meetings inside. We ran against teams of 8-12 girls, usually all African American teams.  And we beat them. In the following years, our team gained girls, and real uniforms.  

At meets, it was HOT.  We didn’t carry around water bottles back then.  Never heard of them.  Most of the home teams would make giant “vats” of Gatorade.  Most of them looked like pig feeding troths, filled with lime green liquid.  It was just gross.  I’m glad the girls usually ran first, because by the time the guys got to the vat, usually they were scooping  that Gatorade into their mouths with their sweat-dripping hands!  YUK. 

Why am I telling you my back-story?  This past week the creator of Gatorade passed away, and that picture of those green vats popped right into my head. 

Dr. Robert Cade, who invented the sports drink Gatorade and launched a multibillion-dollar industry that the beverage continues to dominate, died Tuesday of kidney failure. He was 80.
 He created Gatorade in 1965, at the University of Florida, along with other researchers.  He had been trying to find something to help the schools football players replace the carbohydrates and electrolytes they lost through sweat while playing in the swamp-like heat in Florida...

The research on Gatorade all started because the former Gators Coach, Dwayne Douglas, asked the doctor why the players weren’t peeing after the games.  And this changed everything.
 

“Using their research and about $43 in supplies, they concocted a brew for players to drink while playing football. The first batch was not exactly a hit."

"It sort of tasted like toilet bowl cleaner," said Dana Shires, one of the researchers. "I guzzled it and I vomited," Cade said. "



"The researchers added some sugar and some lemon juice to improve the taste. It was first tested on freshmen because Coach Ray Graves didn't want to hurt the varsity team. "

"Eventually, however, the use of the sports beverage spread to the Gators, who enjoyed a winning record and were known as a "second-half team" by outlasting opponents. "

"After the Gators beat Georgia Tech 27-12 in the Orange Bowl in 1967, Tech coach Bobby Dodd told reporters his team lost because, "We didn't have Gatorade ... that made the difference."


Read the story of Gatorade and the University of Florida's football team  

Gatorade, the Idea that Launched an Industry



Instead of the original four flavors, Gatorade now comes in over 30, and is sold in 80 countries.
 

Born James Robert Cade in San Antonio on Sept. 26, 1927, Cade, a Navy veteran, graduated from the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas.   Cade was appointed an assistant professor in internal medicine at UF in 1961. He worked until he was 76, retiring in November 2004 from the university, where he taught medicine, saw patients and conducted research.    

James Cade 1927-2007




I know it bothered me back in the 70's that I was not allowed to participate on a simple running sports team. 

I'm more upset about it today than I was back then.  It felt more like a “bump” then. 

You see, when you are being discriminated against, you tend to accept what is going on as everyday life; you don’t like it, and you keep trying to change it, but until someone gets in your face and says to you  "YOU ARE BEING DISCRIMINATED AGAINST,"  you don't tend to REALIZE IT.

What happened in sports back then in the 60s, and early 70s was WRONG.

Now we have girls who, the past few years, want to wrestle in a contact sport with boys because there are no girl’s teams.   The boys do not go along with this.  I am on the side of the boys in this one. 

I don’t believe Title IX was meant to pit boys and girls together in a contact sport such as wrestling.  I know a girl is allowed, and should be able to make a football, baseball, soccer, or whatever team if she is as good as or better than her fellow teammates of boys.   But if I were a boy in high school, I too would not want to be wrestling a female in a competition.  I guess, if I were the boy, I would take her out, but most of the girls are in different weight classes, too  . . .  Instead, the boys are forfeiting their matches.  It's a pity.

Read an article from the New York Times on this topic:

 More Girls Take Part in High School Wrestling

 

What do you think about the invention of Gatorade?

 

Did you realize there was discrimination against women
in sports in the 60’s and 70’s?

What about Title IX now?

 

 

Comments

Advocating Mom   

Wow, great topic Janet!  I hadn't given Gatorade much thought up until now but my kids like it a whole lot better the Pedialyte when they get a bad tummy virus. So, I guess I look at it from a mom's point of view rather than an athlete's and I'm thankful its available those couple times a year when we battle dehydration in our house. My daughter particularly likes the Gatorade Rain variety in light purple.  

I attended high school in a small farming community during the mid 1980's and while we had girls sports teams, we weren't always treated equally among each other.  For example, the girl's softball team at my school won the state championship 2 years when I was in school.  Members of the team were queens of the school and yes, they could take out any guy on the football team.  They had everything they could ever want.  I, conversely played on the varsity tennis team.  We weren't even noticed despite having a very competitive team.  We finally were given uniforms but when we got them, they were all in men's sizes!  My tennis shirt was longer than my tennis skirt.  

I'm thankful that Title XIX gave girls the opportunity to compete in athletics.  Its somewhat frustrating now that my daughter has zero interest in any type of team sport.  She has no basis for realizing that the opportunities available to her were hard-fought by the women before her.

I think there are many elements related to Title XIX that are symbolic of the women's lib movement and how many young women today take for granted the opportunities they have to achieve success.

November 29, 2007 3:56 PM

Advocating Mom   

OOPS!  I meant Title 9, not 19!  Don't know where that came from -- it must have been that discrimination in math class during the mid 1970's.

November 29, 2007 4:27 PM

Janet Evans   

Advocating Mom,

I'm so glad you read the blogs!  And don't get me started on the discrimination in math class in the 1970's!  Boy was it there and it started before "mid."

Here we were, at the end of the Vietnam war, it was free this and free that, burning bras, "don't trust anyone over 30," and we could drink alcohol at 18 then, but girls could not be on a sports team.  I can shoot archery though!  I forgot about that one.

It sure was messed up.

November 29, 2007 4:36 PM

In the Race   

The Agony...the Olympics

March 11, 2008 8:32 PM

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