A 6th grade girls team from Kentucky was set to go for the year-end championship tournament, but was told they were banned due to fears boys teams might ‘retaliate’ if they lost to the girls team.

  • Steve@communick.news
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    8 months ago

    That’s not why they were kicked out. The coach lied, to get them playing in the boys league, since they were so good.
    So of course they got kicked out. What you expect the league to do?

    He explained:
    “In November of 2023, Next Level and Larry McGraw deceptively registered a girls team into the 6th grade boys league and under the gender listed as MALE.”
    “We entered them into the league assuming they were a boys’ team as conveniently no roster was ever provided.”
    “Subsequently, their first game was filled in by a boys 6th grade Next Level team because they played the 6th grade boys Cincinnati Royals team - coached by myself, so there was no reason to suspect anything different.”

    He continued:
    “It wasn’t until late January/early February that several teams from the 6th-grade division started traveling down to Kentucky to play their scheduled games, that it became apparent that the Next Level team was, in fact, a girls team.”
    “Several complaints from coaches and teams were filed because of this deception.”

    Social media users, however, saw SWOB’s statement as deflecting from another issue, one that accused the league of trying to keep their feelings from getting hurt in the event the boys were defeated by girls.

    • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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      that is some selective bullshit

      Seriously. What this tells me is that 70+ people either didn’t read the article or they just really have a thing about mixed gender sports. You quoted only the pathetic backpedalling lies he said to try to further justify his actions. BUT FIRST AND FOREMOST he said this (the man you are quoting, Sunderland, is the president)

      The city-wide basketball league, Southwestern Ohio Basketball (SWOB), made the call because they believed that 11 to 12-year-old girls and boys competing against each other on the court could pose a liability risk leading to violence, even though the girls team had been winning 7-1 all season without incident.

      IT IS WHY THEY WERE KICKED OUT.

      It wasn’t until late January/early February that several teams from the 6th-grade division started traveling down to Kentucky to play their scheduled games, that it became apparent that the Next Level team was, in fact, a girls team.

      You’re telling me it took multiple games AND teams for them to become "apparent that it was a girls team " ??? And become a problem. But only until they got far enough because maybe they wouldn’t and then SWOB could avoid PR problem all together.

      this is a reminder to read the fucking article people

      You might come up with a similar conclusion as me, or completely opposite. But OP is patently false and deceptive with their quote and definitive ruling on it, claiming the headline is deceptive! Fuck that.

      • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 months ago

        You might have quoted the wrong part. This is what you’re looking for:

        Doing this 28 years, what we have worried about is a boys team losing to a girls team (especially in the year end tourney), they may get frustrated and retaliate against a girl. Then we have liability issues.”

        Also it looks like the guts of the article is the media statement here:

        https://www.swohiosports.com/

        It’s a daft thing to say, and just pours fuel on the conflagration, but it does reveal some insights into the character of the guy.

      • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        “Either you agree with me or you hate women” is a pretty silly opening argument…

    • RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      So if I understand it correctly, it’s a boys only competition, not an open competition. And since these girls were so good, they wanted to be able to compete against the top teams, so they pulled of a superb ruse to be able to do just that, in the process upsetting some men who don’t want to compete against girls for reasons, especially if they end up losing. That’s going to make a good sport movie one day.

      Many (most?) sports have a top “open” competition that anyone can enter and then several restricted competitions (age, sex, handicaps, …), but even if you qualify for one of the restricted competitions, if you’re good enough, you can still play in the open competition. Except in bible belt country apparently, no girls allowed in the top competition.

      • prime_number_314159@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        These are 6th graders. There’s no “top” competition for 6th graders at all, which is why this is a region specific league, and most of the sports are divided into boys and girls divisions at those ages.

        • RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Why is it divided by sex?

          I can only speak about my nation’s club football (the world kind, not the us one): the normal competition is open to anyone, with smaller competitions for other groups. Those smaller competitions have discriminatory rules for entry, but players that meet those criteria, can still chose to play in the normal competition if they want to. The “normal” competition has many more brackets than the smaller competitions because there’s just way more players, which also means that if you want to play vs the best, that’s where they are. It’s the same principle for all ages.

          I can imagine that at one point the football competition in my country had similar “no girls allowed” rules, but when I grew up in the nineties, the football competition that I played in was already mixed.

      • MagicShel@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        He also said it wasn’t unheard of for a girl to play on a boys’ team or for a girls’ team to compete against boys.

        It sounds like it’s not a boys only competition. It’s not entirely clear whether this quote is just referring to in general or this specific league, but based on the context the latter appears to be the intended reading.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      So the article is wrong, but this still doesn’t make it OK. The article should have just been accurate. That would have been nice.

        • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          What was in the article is that the girls team was kicked out of the league when the only game left was the championship game. You’d think if it was just the “no girls allowed” issue that would have been dealt with much earlier…

    • Stoneykins [any]@mander.xyz
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      Even if you are technically right, you are morally wrong. They should be allowed to register in that league, and if they weren’t then the coach lying about their gender was the correct and moral thing to do.

      Crazy to watch people twist themselves in knots bending over backwards to try and excuse sexism.

      But I don’t even think you are technically right. All those quotes stink like excuses and BS.

    • olympicyes@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      In the statement on their website, Sunderman literally quotes himself telling McGraw that the girls couldn’t play because if they beat a boys team in the playoffs then the boys might get frustrated and physically retaliate, causing a liability issue.

      He didn’t say they couldn’t play because they registered as a boys team. That was more of a supporting anecdote presented because of social media blowback.

    • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      The way I see it, when you’re a sports executive, you have two options in this situation: 1) exclude the girls’ team because “dem’s the rules” or 2) let them play because seeking out the boys’ competition will help them develop into a stronger team.

      Personally, I think 1) is a weak choice, especially when arguments like “someone could get hurt” are both ripe with misogynistic sentiment and refuted by the games played without incident.

    • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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      It wasn’t until late January/early February that several teams from the 6th grade division started traveling down to Kentucky to play their scheduled games, that it became apparent that the Next Level team was, in fact, a girls team. Several complaints from coaches and teams were filed because of this deception.

      At that point we allowed the team to finish the regular season schedule, but would move them into a girls’ tourney at year end.

      This is a direct quote from the Southwestern Ohio Basketball website.

      They allowed the girls to play until the end of the season in the boy’s category, so your take on it is incorrect.

      • S_204@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        LoL. Lemmy is definitely feels over reals so far. And my feeling appreciates that.

            • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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              Oh, great idea, but I was just guessing, I don’t read articles, only what other people think, and then I just go with that.

              The headline is correct, but it doesn’t tell the whole story was my point you absolute doofus.

              • olympicyes@lemmy.world
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                Did you read the article (and linked statements) or not? The league stated the reason the girls couldn’t play and that reason that a boy might not be able to handle avoiding hitting a girl if they lose. None of this would be an issue if the girls weren’t winning. I don’t buy for a second that nobody noticed all season that they were losing to girls.

                • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  You mean the blog post on “comicsands.com”?

                  And this erudite take by “Prez, a social media user on X (Formerly Twitter)”, who “didn’t buy it”?

                  Yes, I did! Multiple times, unfortunately!

                  It’s ridiculous to be so ready to fall for populist propaganda when you just happen to be on the self-congratulatory team, but the mode of thinking is the exact same as employed by MAGA freaks.

                  Your lack of critical thinking makes you just as bad as them.

      • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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        Here’s the quotes:

        SWOB President Tom Sunderman expressed concern in a statement:

        “Doing this for 28 years, what we have worried about is a boys team losing to a girls team (especially in the year end tourney), they may get frustrated and retaliate against a girl.” "Then we have liability issues.” Prez, a social media user on X (Formerly Twitter), didn’t buy it.

        “What he meant to say was they can’t have their boys being emasculated by a better girls team… it would be a blow to their developing manhood to get beat by girls.”

        What context am I missing?

    • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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      Retaliating against your opponents for beating you in a game isn’t normal, but on Patriarchy it is.

      Patriarchy, not even once.

        • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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          You and me both buddy.

          This whole thread is a lowest common denominator extravaganza, I’m actually shocked at the lack of critical thinking. People read a headline and get riled up without asking questions, and if you do, you’re a homophobic racist antihuman piece of shit. What a fucking echo chamber. Was lemmy acquired by Tumblr without telling anyone? Reddit has higher standards than this.

          It’s funny how 12 people downvoted me, and 15 people “genuinely didn’t understand”. So, did you downvote first, then realized that you didn’t even get it? That’s how the right wing thinks and acts.

    • golli@lemm.ee
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      Once again, girls are somehow responsible for boys’ inability to behave

      That’s really not what i am getting from this article at all.

      made the call because they believed that 11 to 12-year-old girls and boys competing against each other on the court could pose a liability risk leading to violence, even though the girls team had been winning 7-1 all season without incident.

      they may get frustrated and retaliate against a girl.” "Then we have liability issues.”

      McGraw said the girls were never in any real danger during the games, aside from the occasional side-eye.

      “They got giggles, they got laughs, and people talked about them… you know, the looks.”

      [emphasis added]

      Where “once again” is the boys inability to behave? All i see is adults wanting to dodge POTENTIAL liability.


      Beyond that there is the question about their participation in the league itself. Here there are as i see it two sides:

      • They participated through deception (listing as mail AND apparently fielding a male team in the first game)

      • Or one can be on the side that the system is broken and they should have been allowed to participate in the first place.

      Again something that adults decide. Not sure if we have enough information to judge this properly.


      Not sure why i spend much time on this nonesense, especially since i find this to be a pretty poor article (as is any that just randomly quotes social media users to make its point).

  • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    “…what we have worried about is a boys team is losing to a girls team (especially in a year end tourney) they may get frustrated and retaliate against a girl,” a text allegedly sent by the tournament directors reads.

    “Throughout the season we had a few teams come to us about this and raise concerns about it. Because of this we decided to keep them out of the tournament,” another text reads.

    Oh, so the teams were threatening to commit violence against the girls. Why not just kick those teams out?

    • pachrist@lemmy.world
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      I don’t want to be an old man, but if you hit a girl when I was in 6th grade, you were an instant social pariah. Everyone would beat your ass.

      Kicking them out doesn’t solve the problem. They’d just blame the girls instead of being introspective. Let one of these loser little boys throw hands and learn really fucking fast that the meanest, hardest hitting monster on this planet is a pissed off 12 year old girl. When he’s getting his hair ripped out a fistful at a time, he’ll understand why he lost.

      • JoBo@feddit.uk
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        but if you hit a girl when I was in 6th grade, you were an instant social pariah. Everyone would beat your ass.

        And this is why male violence against women is non-existent, children.

        There is a whole world out there to pay attention to and you’ve taken the performative utterances of tweenage boys desperately trying to become men as evidence to deny everything else. WTF?

        FWIW, the ones who were shouting the loudest are absolutely the most likely to be dominating, coercing, and hitting their female partners now. They’re performing masculinity because they don’t know what it is and that terrifies them.

        And because the world is dominated by these frightened little boys, we punish girls and women for the violence of men and boys. This story is not an outlier, it is the fucking story.

      • DrPop@lemmy.world
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        Yeah a lot of boys forget that girls don’t fight “fair”. Due to societal pressures on women to surpress heir emotions, when it comes time to fight that’s it. Boys are taught by society fighting is normal and even is encouraged in how they play.

        • nednobbins@lemm.ee
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          6th graders generally don’t fight fair. They don’t generally fight well at all.

          The typical fight between 6th grade boys is every bit as much of a slap fest as the typical fight between 6th grade girls.

          6th grade boys haven’t hit puberty yet. Given that these girls are kicking their butts at basket ball I’ll assume they slap harder than the boys do.

          • Schadrach@lemmy.sdf.org
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            They’re probably taller than the boys, too which plays into them beating them at basketball since height is such a big advantage and girls tend to hit their growth spurts earlier.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      Sorry, but boys-will-be-boys. So we have to ban girls from competing, because we literally cannot continence telling any of our precious little superstars to cut that shit out.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    So the league decided to preemptively retaliate on behalf of the hypothetical violent boys?

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    One of top posts here is selective as fuxk quoting only the president’s backpedalling after their official initi statement being the fear of retaliation. I’m getting way too annoyed watching the upvotes (aka misinformation) grow just because this asshat added a quote.

    Oh by the way, sunderman.- the president - coached one of the boy teams that played against the girls team. And they are trying to say it took time to realize, to justify why they were allowed to play up until the championships. FFS this is garbage sportmanship

    (Edited to correct autocorrect)

        • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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          There are people who firmly believe women can never outcompete men due to biology. With some outliers, this is currently true within a defined age range and only in certain sports (there are several where women routinely outclass men). In 6th grade a good chunk of the boys haven’t hit puberty yet and you can easily find girls who are stronger, faster, and more athletic than boys in their cohort because everyone is still developing. The boys getting beat right now could hit a growth spurt next week and play in the NBA.

          The point is at this age, the kids are actually pretty evenly matched. If the boys have a violence problem, they should be banned from playing till they fix it. Otherwise this league head should shut the fuck up.

            • Pips@lemmy.sdf.org
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              In sixth grade at most schools? Probably most of them. That’s right around when most boys just start hitting puberty and girls tend to generally be bigger and more athletic than boys until then.

              In general? Gymnastics, figure skating, cheerleading, skiing (best downhill skier in the world is a woman)…

    • Nobody@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The president’s team got beaten by girls, and now he’s throwing a hissy fit because they’re going to beat him again in the tournament. Don’t project your own fragile masculinity on the next generation.

  • merthyr1831@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This is how most sex segregated sports came about

    1. women beats men
    2. women banned
    3. segregated division created because of “biological differences”
    • Balinares@pawb.social
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      I wonder why people are downvoting your comment. It’s literally what happened. See for instance this paper on the history of gender segregation in the Olympics: https://theworld.org/stories/2016-08-17/see-120-years-struggle-gender-equality-olympics.

      Quote: “Margaret Murdock from the US won a silver in a tie in the 1976 Riffle Event, one of the events in the shooting categories. The rifle event was split into men’s and women’s events in 1984.”

      • theherk@lemmy.world
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        I suspect because this being what has happened in “most sex segregated sports” is a very very bold assertion. In which of those sports are women holding top positions? I mean women athletes are awesome, but the idea that separation happens because the poor men can’t keep up is just… I don’t know, maybe I’m a confused old man.

        But I thought it was so that women could compete at the top levels of their sport in sports where their times, weights, etc. are not really proximal. They should of course be combined where the physical implications are negligible, but the idea that what’s preventing that is that the men just can’t compete with the women seems strange to me.

        But is there some support for that?

      • Th3D3k0y@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Sports without contact mechanics I’ve always wondered why the split. Like men’s and women’s chess… what?

        But men’s and women’s football? That kind of makes sense, not saying women’s should be banned from the men’s leagues, but let them make that choice themselves

        • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          Sports without contact mechanics I’ve always wondered why the split

          Look at world records for any sport that requires raw strength/power, speed, and endurance. The split is pretty extreme. The marathon world record is 2:00:35, set in 2023. The women’s world record is 2:17:42, 13% slower. For the 100m, the top time is 9.58s for men. Over 180 men have broken the 10 second barrier. The top woman is 10.49; no woman has ever broken the 10 second barrier. Given that power lifting is harder to do direct comparisons (…in a way that readily makes sense to people that aren’t competitive power lifters…), I’ll just note that it’s not even close.

          Any sport that has a significant speed, endurance, or strength component is going to tend to be dominated by men. When it’s purely a skill issue, the splits are much more even. When you look at archery, for instance, women sometimes beat men; the split is fairly even.

          In a lot of ways, it makes sense to have a hard gender split in sports, and not try to make a solid delineation between what sports require enough skill to overcome a physical gap versus which ones don’t.

        • OrgunDonor@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I think it is a bit more difficult than that. I have really enjoywd watching downhill bike racing in the past, and both the men’s and women’s races are incredible.

          If you don’t know, It is a single rider time trial down incredibly technical courses on a mountain bike.

          Unfortunately I don’t think it would be good to mix men and women, because the men are faster. This year’s world champs race had the men finishing 30s faster, the fastest woman would have been 66th. Results

          I would love to see more mixed competitions in the elite level of sports where it makes sense.

          • kofe@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            I often think of the Olympic skier that was interviewed by NPR a few years ago. She described how the boys around her were encouraged to do riskier jumps, whereas when she’d bring it up coaches, parents etc would all express concern about “what if you get hurt?”

            There are a lot of social factors I think we should consider before writing women off as inherently lesser in competitive sports. We don’t know how many women are held back by these narratives if they aren’t even given the chance. Even if it’s the case now, I really wonder how much is purely biological

      • harderian729@lemmy.world
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        She got a silver and 8 years later it was split into men and women’s events?

        She didn’t even win…

        It’s sad the mental gymnastics and revisionist history you all perpetuate to support your biased agenda.

        Just another reason why the vast majority of people on these forums are not worth taking seriously.

        • Aleric@lemmy.world
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          For someone with such issues with the forum, you seem to be doing a lot of whining and not much leaving.

          • harderian729@lemmy.world
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            Why would I stop participating because ya’ll are a bunch of dunces?

            That’s how you win and shut me out of the conversation, lol. Which is exactly what you’re trying to do.

            • SphereofWreckening@ttrpg.network
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              That’s how you win and shut me out of the conversation, lol. Which is exactly what you’re trying to do.

              People tend to do that to ya when you’re personality is centered around being wrong and obnoxious.

              • harderian729@lemmy.world
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                But I’m correct and respectful.

                I’m just saying things you don’t like, which is why you try to shut me out of the conversation.

                I see it all the time and don’t expect more from people like you.

  • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Regardless of the prejudice angle in this story, I feel bad for the girls for being excluded from possibly winning the championship, especially when they were performing well.

      • Ashen44@lemmy.ca
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        Don’t worry about it, some people just throw downvotes around everywhere. You could make the least divisive post possible that everyone universally could agree is correct and still get a downvote, so it’s best to just ignore it. This is especially true on news communities, infamously the preferred hunting grounds of many a troll.

          • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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            Fair enough, but it’s just so weird.

            Like what is that? Just some automated system response, making sure there’s always at least one downvote on anyone’s comment?

            I’m being facetious, but you get my point. It’s just so out of left field, it just makes you wonder.

        • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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          Thanks for replying. I’m honestly not worried about it, just really curious. I like to know if there’s something missing in my perception of the comment I made, basically.

  • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    That’s 11 years old.

    Okay let’s hear all the excuses for 11 year olds needing to be super competitive and separated by gender.

      • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Then they should make 2 leagues: one where everyone is allowed to participate, and another one where only boys can participate, so they can win too. Just like we have with every sport’s women’s league.

        Of course the prizes in the boys-only league should be lower since they play in a less competitive league.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          Of course the prizes in the boys-only league should be lower since they play in a less competitive league.

          Sadly, the way these things tend to work is that a handful of patriarchs make all the rules, from who gets to play to what goes in the prize pool.

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Which we care about… Why? Is there some million dollar prize for 11 year old basketball I’m not aware of?

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Then you can’t have it both ways when they get to high school. Or are you saying Girl Sports shouldn’t exist? If a girl can’t compete in high school basketball against boys, then too bad?

          • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            School sports shouldn’t be competitive in the same way. It’s not the point of student sports. That’s for learning to operate in a team, learning social dynamics, building hand-eye coordination, and physical fitness.

            But this wasn’t a school league. So for apples to apples, yes once they reach high school age in private leagues they should be grouped by ability.

  • ParsnipWitch@feddit.de
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    8 months ago

    Can relate. I was beat up by another kid of my age after practice because I beat him in a really small and unimportant Judo tournament. We were both 12 and his parents, my parents and the trainers all agreed that he just overreacted because he was scared the other boys would bully him. I switched to ballet afterwards.

    • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      That’s a shit dojo 100%. Everywhere I’ve trained if someone pulled that shit, they’d at the very least get sat the fuck down for a good long chat with the sensei, if not kicked out entirely… not to mention pushups, so, so, so many pushups.

    • ripcord@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Have you talked to your parents about it since? Do they still feel that way? How do they justify it?

  • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    More sources that go into depth on what happened and the fallout …

    https://www.rawstory.com/next-level-basketball/

    https://www.wvxu.org/sports/2024-03-04/kentucky-girls-basketball-team-banned-southwestern-ohio

    And maybe this is why the girls were shut down … On Feb 28 in an event in Alabama the girl’s team, who were forced to play in the boy’s league, won the championship but the trophy went to the losers instead.

    https://www.cbssports.com/general/news/why-an-alabama-girls-youth-basketball-team-wasnt-awarded-a-championship-trophy-after-beating-a-boys-team/

    • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Next Level Girls Basketball is a youth team based in Wilder, Ky., that coaches girls from the 3rd grade level through high school. The team’s highest level players are competing for scholarships to play in college, but many others are there just because they like playing basketball.

      I’d like to know the age of the competing teams. These were sixth year level students, the first game was played by, as I can make out from the article, a stand-in team of 6th graders (boys).

      I’d want to know if they only met other 6th grade teams after that, or what the age composition of both teams were, because I feel like that could potentially be a factor.

      • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        "Subsequently, their first game was filled in by a boys 6th grade Next Level team … It wasn’t until late January/early February that several teams from the 6th grade division started traveling down to Kentucky to play their scheduled games, that it became apparent that the Next Level team was, in fact, a girls team."