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Cheerleading NOT A College Sport, Judge Rules

PAT EATON-ROBB   07/21/10 05:55 PM ET   AP

Cheerleading Not A Sport

HARTFORD, Conn. — Competitive cheerleading is not an official sport that colleges can use to meet gender-equity requirements, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in ordering a Connecticut school to keep its women's volleyball team.

Several volleyball players and their coach had sued Quinnipiac University after it announced in March 2009 that it would eliminate the team for budgetary reasons and replace it with a competitive cheer squad.

The school contended the cheer squad and other moves kept it in compliance with Title IX, the 1972 federal law that mandates equal opportunities for men and women in education and athletics. But U.S. District Judge Stefan Underhill disagreed in a ruling that those involved say was the first time the cheerleading issue has been decided by a judge.

"Competitive cheer may, some time in the future, qualify as a sport under Title IX," Underhill wrote. "Today, however, the activity is still too underdeveloped and disorganized to be treated as offering genuine varsity athletic participation opportunities for students."

Quinnipiac has 60 days to come up with a plan to keep the volleyball team through next season and comply with gender rules.

"The athletes all look forward to getting back on the volleyball court for preseason in three weeks," coach Robin Sparks said. "As their coach, I feel fortunate to be able to work with such strong young women who are not afraid to stand up for their principles. It will be a joy to be back in the gym with them this fall."

School officials responded to the ruling by saying they would start a women's rugby team, but they refused to answer any questions, discuss the future of other athletic teams or say whether they would continue offering scholarships to competitive cheerleaders.

An activity can be considered a sport under Title IX if it meets specific criteria. It must have coaches, practices, competitions during a defined season and a governing organization. The activity also must have competition as its primary goal – not merely the support of other athletic teams.

Quinnipiac and seven other schools recently formed a governing body, the National Competitive Stunts and Tumbling Association, to govern and develop competitive cheer as a college sport.

Previously, competitive cheerleading championships were put on by two private organizations with ties to Varsity Brands Inc., which makes cheerleading apparel and runs camps.

Bill Seely, the executive director of USA Cheer, a national governing body for both sideline and competitive cheerleading, said he believes the ruling represents only a minor setback for the efforts to make cheer an intercollegiate sport.

"It's an opportunity to look at what hasn't worked and find what will work, so we are creating more opportunities for young women and not affecting other female sports," he said. "It's an opportunity to tweak some things."

During the weeklong trial last month, Quinnipiac had argued that if it could not count competitive cheerleading as a sport it might be forced to shut the program down, eliminating 36 positions on the squad.

Quinnipiac spokeswoman Lynn Bushnell said the school was disappointed its cheer team will lose varsity status.

"We will continue to press for competitive cheer to become an officially recognized varsity sport in the future," Bushnell said in a statement. "Consistent with our long-standing plans to expand opportunities in women's athletics, the university intends to add women's rugby as a varsity sport beginning in the 2011-2012 academic year."

The cheerleading issue was one of several Underhill was asked to decide as he considered whether the school had improperly manipulated it rosters.

He also found the school was underreporting the participation opportunities for its male athletes and overstating the opportunities for women.

Evidence presented to support an injunction a year ago showed the men's baseball and lacrosse teams would drop players before reporting data to the Department of Education and reinstate them after the reports were submitted. Conversely, the women's softball team would add players before the reporting date, knowing the additional players would not be on the team in the spring.

School officials have said any improper manipulation of the rosters has stopped. Underhill said things have gotten better, but the school "is still continuing to deflate the size of its men's rosters and inflate the size of it's women's rosters."

Underhill also agreed with the plaintiffs' argument that female runners who participate on school's indoor, outdoor and cross country track teams should be counted just once for Title IX purposes. The men have just a cross country team.

He said the women's indoor and outdoor track teams were "in essence, an adjunct of the cross-country team."

The judge had made the case a class action for all female athletes at the school, and the plaintiffs attorneys said it would have an impact far beyond Quinnipiac.

"This is a victory not only for the student athletes and their coach, but for women's collegiate sports generally," attorney Jon Orleans said. "We look forward to discussing with Quinnipiac its plan for compliance with the court's ruling."

Shawn Ladda, the president of the National Association of Girls and Women in Sports, said the ruling should send a message to schools across the nation that Title IX is not about matching numbers on a tally sheet.

"It's about the spirit of the law and it's about providing real opportunities for women," she said. "Fairness is fairness and manipulating numbers is not going to be tolerated. We need more decisions like this to push institutions to do the right thing."

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HARTFORD, Conn. — Competitive cheerleading is not an official sport that colleges can use to meet gender-equity requirements, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in ordering a Connecticut school to ...
HARTFORD, Conn. — Competitive cheerleading is not an official sport that colleges can use to meet gender-equity requirements, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in ordering a Connecticut school to ...
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ThinkTwiceWriteOnce
Jarndyce v. Jarndyce
01:08 PM on 07/23/2010
Right up there with Synchronized Swimming, Ice Dancing, and Bridge & Chess (yes, both recognized by the IOC). One man's sport is another man's father's worst nightmare.
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12:10 AM on 07/23/2010
Several people have pointed out that cheerleaders are prone to broken bones and damaged joints. This is happening for many reasons that have nothing to do with whether it is or is not a sport. The track around a football field and the small side area beside a basketball court offer little protection for girls who are thrown into the air and not caught. Many of these girls do not have any training in how to safely execute the dance and gymnastic moves they are attempting to perform. A lot of cheer coaches have no expertise and bring nothing other then adult supervision to the team. The girls do have athletic ability. However, since their focus seems to be on their ‘sport’ and not ‘cheering’ on the football or basketball team one does wonder, what is the point? Cheerleading has become the land version of synchronized swimming.
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bridgeman
Jesus was a Jazz fan
10:52 PM on 07/22/2010
"psssst" the sound of air being released
10:13 PM on 07/22/2010
I could have told you it wasn't a sport but I'm glad I finally have legal evidence.
11:43 AM on 07/23/2010
Ditto here. Thanks to a sensible judge. Volleyball vs Cheerleading as a sport?
07:07 PM on 07/22/2010
Not a sport?Let volley ballers follow the cheerleaders for a few days,I have a daughter that is one and I feel many football players would quit if they had to follow the regime.That is a tough sport with young ladies having broken bones and damaged joints.It is not easy. John Broadwell
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02:11 PM on 07/23/2010
Exercise and sport are two different things.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Simon Woodward
12:01 PM on 07/24/2010
Exactly. Cheerleading is just jumping up and down wearing a short and a smile on your face
06:47 PM on 07/22/2010
Volleyball > Cheerleading
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gda002
05:14 PM on 07/22/2010
It isn't a sport, but I don't understand why a private college should be forced to offer any sport. Isn't that the whole idea of private? I understand doing this for state funded schools and high schools, but this is a private college.
05:41 PM on 07/22/2010
Even private universities are subject to federal anti-discrimination laws. It's not that they're required to offer sports, it's that if they choose to offer sports they must comply with Title IX.
05:05 PM on 07/22/2010
does sue sylvester know yet???
04:32 PM on 07/22/2010
Quick note FYI: Quinnipiac does *not* have a football program.

Yes cheerleading requires great athletic skill and strength -- but it is *not* a sport. It's an athletic exhibition.

IMHO, anything that is subjectively judged -- figure skating, gymnastics, cheerleading, etc -- is an exhibition of athletic skill. I think the term "sport" should be confined to activities that are objectively judged by timing/scoring. Just a thought
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06:29 PM on 07/22/2010
My thoughts exactly.
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cdecisneros
my micro bio is empty because I went to the micro
03:27 PM on 07/22/2010
The problem is that colleges think that there are 3 kinds of Athletes. Men, Women and football players.
02:47 PM on 07/22/2010
Wow, this headline is very misleading. The judge wasn't saying it wasn't athletic or wasn't a sport, he was saying that the competitive aspects of cheerleading aren't well organized enough to count it as a sport under Title IX. It means 1) schools can't cut other women's sports and justify it by throwing together a cheerleading squad and 2) if the competitive circuit grows, cheerleading will qualify under Title IX.
01:53 PM on 07/22/2010
Tell the judge to try a basket toss.
01:02 PM on 07/22/2010
Oh, I think that cheerleading is as athletic, and also as dangerous, as many sports, but its really not competition, it's exhibitionism. Maybe we could have competitive stripping ??
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just walkin the dog here
So, just where is this micro-bio? This it?
11:35 AM on 07/22/2010
Isn't it sort of team gymnastics, with yelling and clapping?
12:57 PM on 07/22/2010
Wow, you really know your sports. The only thing a cheerleader and a gymnast have in common is basic tumbling skills. A cheerleader may or may not learn how to tumble. A gymnast has been tumbling since the first level of competition.
01:16 PM on 07/22/2010
Not true of competitive cheer. My granddaughter's team all started as gymnast and many teams operate out of gymnastics centers. It is truly team gymnastics with yelling, clapping, and airhorns.
11:19 AM on 07/22/2010
I don't see how any progressive woman can enjoy cheerleading or consider it a sport. Cheerleading itself was created to litearlly sideline women while the men engaged in the "real sports." It's more of an exhibition than anything else. The judge ruled correctly.