DR. CAROLE OGLESBY’S LEADERSHIP ON AIAW

WSI past president & current executive board member, Dr. Carole Oglesby helped established AIAW and served as its first president.

Dr. Carole Oglesby’s Leadership on AIAW

April 2021

WomenSport Internaitonal (WSI) past president & current executive board member, Dr. Carole Oglesby was the leader for establishing Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women

(AIAW) and served as its first president.

“Fifty years ago, Carole Oglesby helped establish a governing body for women in college athletics at a time when the National Collegiate Athletics Association only oversaw men’s sports. When she saw images earlier this month of the inferior training facilities provided for the women’s NCAA basketball tournament—a few dumbbells and some yoga mats—she realized that some things still haven’t changed.

“I really shake my head on this one,” Oglesby said. “Who is going to make these powerful bodies, like the NCAA, do the things that they promised they were going to do?”

As the first president of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women in the 1970s, Ogelsby was at the heart of the long and contentious history of seeking equal opportunity, resources  and exposure for women’s college sports. The AIAW was briefly the dominant governing body for women’s collegiate athletics but lost a bruising legal battle with the NCAA that sunk the organization in 1982.

The AIAW was founded in 1971 and thrived on a shoestring budget until 1978, when federal courts forced universities to comply with Title IX. The NCAA subsequently launched a takeover of women’s sports that drastically curtailed the percentage of women coaches and administrators in college sports.

Oglesby and others say that what resulted from that bitter fight is a system in which, 40 years later, women remain underrepresented and their basketball championship remains underfunded, under-marketed and undervalued compared to men’s March Madness.”

Click here to read the full story on the Wall Street Journal.

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