This year’s Super Bowl will probably not be remembered for
the Sam Gordon’s appearance, but NFL Commissioner Roger
Goodell hopes that the 9-year-old girl will serve as an inspiration for
many—including other young girls.
Gordon became an internet sensation with a YouTube video her
father posted that shows her outrunning the boys in a football game. Since
November, when the video was posted, Gordon has been receiving a plethora of
media attention, including a feature on Good
Morning America’s “Play of the Day.” She also became the first female
football player to appear Wheaties
box.
Sam Gordon’s story is fascinating for a number of reasons. For one, there is the Justin Bieber-ish
resemblance: young talent, YouTube video leading to commercial success… Minus
the perfume
line, she’s got it all.
On a more serious note, the celebration of Sam Gordon is
remarkable, but should be consumed with caution. Let’s go over the positives
first. She is a girl playing in a sport that is notorious for excluding women.
The coverage focuses on her athletic accomplishments. The media cite her stats
(1,911 Rush yds, 35 TD, 65 tackles), highlight her pace and agility and even
offer a commentary of her plays. In a perfect world, all female athletes would
be covered the way Sam Gordon is.
Her confidence also provides a positive example for young
girls who strive to succeed on boys’ teams and/or in sports that do not provide
equitable opportunities for girls. In fact, Abby Wambach from the
U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team, who invited Gordon to training and a game, considered
meeting the young double-sport athlete an honor.
Jane
McManus, from espnW, quoted Wambach saying, "Sam is the bi-product of
a powerful movement in women's sports. Her family provided her the opportunity
to play whatever sport she loved and her story [is] one that I hope will
influence many girls to follow their dreams in all sports. I was honored to
treat her to a game as she inspires me to do more and be better. All I can say
is, thank you Sam Gordon for your impact on all of us."
McManus also reported that Gordon preferred soccer over
football and plans on playing football for only a couple more years. Her travels
across the country will also presumably end with the Super Bowl attendance and,
as McManus said, Gordon will return to her normal life.
Goodell invited Gordon to attend the Super
Bowl as a spectator. Currently, that’s about the closest women can get to
the field unless they are, of course, cheerleaders. Or unless the NFL has a
referee lockout and a female
ref just so happens to be available.
Although Gordon receives kind questions about her future
plans with football, I have yet to see an article that actually acknowledges
the systemic exclusion of women from football by the leagues, schools and by
courts. Title IX does not help much here either because of the contact sport
provision—football does not “count.” Despite the occasional participation of girls and women on football teams on different levels, they remain in a token status.
Considering the alarming findings about injuries in
football, particularly concussions—even
in pee-wee—perhaps Gordon is also smart to plan on a soccer career. (On a
concussion note, rising
rates for girls in soccer has also received some attention.) But before we
get carried away by Gordon’s potential to become a superstar athlete, let us
remember that she is only 9 years old.
Gordon's media exposure, however, is worthy of mention because provides
an interesting glimpse into the U.S. sporting culture. On the one hand, the
celebratory coverage communicates that girls and women in sport “can” do it. On
the other hand, the she can do whatever she wants to rhetoric in a sport like
football is close to an illusion.
I am not sure if advocating for increased
opportunities for women in football is be the best idea in light of the rising
justified panic
about head injuries. But when it comes to contact sports, girls and women
are far from inclusion. So, if the strategy is to celebrate girls and women in
football, the prevailing structural barriers need more attention.
--- Dunja Antunovic