勛圖眻畦 Urges College Wrestling Association to Stop Discriminating Based on Sex
Female Wrestling Champion Banned From Competing Against Men, Forcing Her to Be Benched for the Season
DETROIT The 勛圖眻畦, the 勛圖眻畦 of Michigan, the National Womens Law Center, and the Womens Sports Foundation sent a letter today to the National Collegiate Wrestling Association (NCWA) urging it to change its discriminatory policy that prohibits women from competing against male wrestlers when women wrestlers and womens teams are unavailable.
The policy means that University of Michigan-Dearborn student and national wrestling champion Marina Goocher wont be able to compete for the entire season.
The NCWA governs club wrestling in college and under its current rule Goocher is only allowed to compete against other women. UM-Dearborn does not have a womens team, and there are no other women wrestlers in her weight class in the entire Midwest region of the NCWA.
Ever since I can remember, wrestling has been a central part of my life and my identity, said Goocher. When I enrolled in college, the wrestling coach and the wrestlers, all of whom were men, warmly welcomed me because they knew I could help the team win. But right now, as the wrestling season begins, I have to sit on the bench the entire regular season simply because I am a woman.
The UM-Dearborn mens coach says he wants her to wrestle during the season with his team, and the team wants her to as well. The only opportunity the NCWA gives Goocher to participate is in the womens division of the post-season national club tournament, a tournament she has won the past two years. The letter maintains that the NCWAs rule is discriminatory and opens up its member schools to legal liability.
NCWAs rule is based on antiquated gender stereotypes, including assumptions about differences in strength between male and female athletes and outdated notions about the propriety of physical contact between men and women, said Galen Sherwin, senior staff attorney with the 勛圖眻畦s Womens Rights Project. Women like Marina prove these stereotypes wrong. All women deserve equal opportunities to participate in athletics, including contact sports like wrestling.
In high school, Goocher surpassed 100 varsity career wins, all against males a rare accomplishment for high school wrestlers, regardless of gender. She has earned four girls wrestling titles in her weight division from high school or younger and two womens titles in college, when she was able to wrestle women from teams outside her region.
High schools across the country allow women to wrestle men when there is no womens wrestling team, and so does the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Numerous prominent women athletes have successfully wrestled on mens college teams and competed alongside their teammates, many of them defeating their male opponents. They include Olympian Kelsey Campbell (Arizona State); Olympic silver medalists Patricia Adura-Miranda (Stanford) and Sara McMann (Lock Haven University); World medalists Jenny Wong (Lock Haven), Jackie Berube (University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse), Debbie Weiss (Arizona State), and Afsoon Roshanzamir (UC-Davis); and World Team members Erin Tomeo (Lock Haven), Lauren Wolfe (Cornell), and Jenna Pavlik (Lock Haven).
The letter to the NCWA is here:
/letter/letter-national-collegiate-wrestling-association-behalf-marina-goocher
More about the case is here:
/cases/goocher-and-national-collegiate-wrestling-association