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A closer look at the effects of Title IX by the numbers

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50 years after Title IX: How UM started a revolution

A little-known fact as Title IX celebrates its 50th anniversary: The University of Miami in 1973 became the first university in the nation to offer women’s athletic scholarships. We look back on it all here:

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Title IX BY THE NUMBERS

Number of girls participating in high school sports

1972: 294,015.

2019 (last year it was reported): 3.4 million.

Girls made up 7 percent of the high school varsity athletes in 1972. In 2019, that number was up to 43 percent.

Number of women participating in college sports

1972: 29,977

2020-21: 215,486

Women made up 15 percent of collegiate athletes in 1972. In 2020-21, that number was up to 44 percent.

Title IX TIMELINE

1960: Wilma Rudolph becomes the first U.S. woman to win three gold medals at the Olympics and goes on to become a civil rights advocate.

1964: The Civil Rights Act includes sex as one of the things that employers can’t discriminate against. It also establishes the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Patsy Mink of Hawaii becomes the first woman of color elected to the U.S. House; she later co-authors Title IX, the Early Childhood Education Act and the Women’s Educational Equality Act.

1971: The Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) is founded to govern collegiate women’s athletics and administer national championships.

1972: On June 23, Congress passes Title IX, which is signed into law by President Richard Nixon. Title IX states: “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.”

1973: On May 20, the University of Miami signs Homestead golfer Terry Williams to an athletic scholarship, becoming the first major university in the nation to offer an athletic scholarship to a woman. UM signed 15 women athletes for the fall 1973 semester. Also in 1973, Billie Jean King beats Bobby Riggs in straight sets in the “The Battle of the Sexes” tennis exhibition match and founds the Women’s Tennis Association.

1975: President Gerald Ford signs Title IX athletics regulations, which gives athletic departments up to three years to implement, after noting “it was the intent of Congress under any reason of interpretation to include athletics.”

1976: NCAA challenges the legality of Title IX regarding athletics in a lawsuit that is dismissed two years later.

1982: Louisiana Tech beats Cheyney State for the first NCAA women’s basketball title. Two months later, the AIAW folds, putting top women’s collegiate sports fully under the NCAA umbrella

1987: Pat Summitt wins the first of her eight women’s basketball national titles at Tennessee.

1996: Female athletes win a lawsuit and force Brown University to restore funding for women’s gymnastics and volleyball after saying the school violated Title IX when it turned both teams into donor-funded entities. The Women’s National Basketball Association is launched and begins play a year later.

1999: Brandi Chastain’s penalty kick gives the United States a win over China in the World Cup final, which was attended by a sellout crowd of 90,000 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

2019: U.S. women’s national soccer team files a gender discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation, demanding equitable pay.

2022: South Carolina’s Dawn Staley becomes the first Black Division I basketball coach, male or female, to win more than one national championship. The U.S. women’s national soccer team reaches a milestone agreement to be paid equally to the men’s national team.

SOURCES: Women’s Sports Foundation, AP

This story was originally published June 22, 2022 at 8:15 AM.

Michelle Kaufman
Miami Herald
Miami Herald sportswriter Michelle Kaufman has covered 14 Olympics, six World Cups, Wimbledon, U.S. Open, NCAA Basketball Tournaments, NBA Playoffs, Super Bowls and has been the soccer writer and University of Miami basketball beat writer for 25 years. She was born in Frederick, Md., and grew up in Miami.
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50 years after Title IX: How UM started a revolution

A little-known fact as Title IX celebrates its 50th anniversary: The University of Miami in 1973 became the first university in the nation to offer women’s athletic scholarships. We look back on it all here: