Rivals.com from Yahoo sports brings us CBS Interactive U-wire (huh?) and several articles on women's basketball:
Gators get out dancing shoes
Illinois dominated by new faces
Red Raiders relying on experience
Penn State lacking height as team and Penn State aims for Big Ten championship
On a side note, how nice is it that, with Portland gone, I can stop cheering against all things Penn State (though, I must say, I've got some issues with Joe and his support of Rene).
Which leads to Title IX blog:
Gators get out dancing shoes
Illinois dominated by new faces
Red Raiders relying on experience
Penn State lacking height as team and Penn State aims for Big Ten championship
On a side note, how nice is it that, with Portland gone, I can stop cheering against all things Penn State (though, I must say, I've got some issues with Joe and his support of Rene).
Which leads to Title IX blog:
With apologies for tooting our own horn, my co-blogger Kris and I are pleased to announce that the Journal of Sport and Social Issues has published our article about race and the Jennifer Harris case.Toot, toot!
Here is the abstract:
In 2007 Penn State basketball coach Rene Portland retired shortly after a confidential settlement ended a discrimination lawsuit brought by former player Jennifer Harris against Portland and Penn State. Because of Portland's infamous policy of not allowing lesbians on her team, her departure was celebrated as a victory against homophobia in sports. Yet although Harris's claims of sexual orientation discrimination were validated in the media, her allegations of racial discrimination were ignored or dismissed as implausible. In this article, we examine the omission of race from the discourse surrounding this case and suggest that both legal and cultural factors contribute to society's tendency to ignore the intersecting discrimination in sport and the multiplicity of identity.
A subscription is required to download the whole article, but we are more than happy to send reprints on request.