Showing posts with label college. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

BCS Championship Game Tonight

The nation's sporting attention turns briefly tonight from the chase for the NFL championship to the BCS Championship.   The venue will be University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, AZ for the title clash starting at 7 PM CST later tonight between the Number 1 ranked Auburn Tigers and the Number 2 ranked Oregon Ducks.

This BCS title game will not only be the first clash between Pac-10 and SEC schools, it's also the first that features teams who were not ranked at the beginning of the season.

The SEC has been dominant in BCS title game play, with its members running up a spotless 6-0 record in title games appearances.  Auburn is seeking to keep the SEC BCS championship game record unblemished at 7-0.

Auburn is also seeking to keep the SEC BCS championship streak alive as well and win the conference's fifth straight national championship game and in the process win their first outright national championship since 1957.

The Ducks are not only fighting to validate their pedigree as an elite football school and their first ever national championship, they are fighting for the pride of the Pac-10 conference.    This is the third Pac-10 appearance but the first for a team besides USC.  

Should be a fun game to watch between two high octane uptempo offensive football teams.       

As to which one leaves Glendale with the BCS Championship trophy later tonight?     While my heart is with the Oregon Ducks since it would be their first championship period, my football analyst brain says it'll be Auburn hoisting the trophy when the game is concluded


Sunday, December 19, 2010

ConGRADulations Graduates!

Yesterday in many colleges across the country there were commencement ceremonies held for the persons who were graduating during the fall semester.

In my own family I had two cousins graduating from Prairie View A&M and a little over 1000 miles away my Baltimore home girl Cydne was getting her sheepskin from Coppin State.

I bounced out of my undisclosed location for a few hours to attend his graduation party, tell him how proud I was of him and even drop a few words of wisdom to both graduates along with many of our assorted relatives and friends.

So I wanted to take the time to say to my cousins Ray and Patrick, Cydne and all you December college grads who read TransGriot, congratulations.

May your road of life be a superhighway to success with few roads blocks, speed traps and potholes.

TransGriot update: found out Cydne graduated magna cum laude from Coppin State!  Way to go sis!


Wednesday, December 15, 2010

NCAA Working On Trans Athletic Policy Interpretation

I've been saying they have needed to do so for years along with other people inside and outside the community, and now it looks like the NCAA is finally getting around to it.  

According to the Inside Higher Ed blog the NCAA is putting together a policy interpretation on trans athletes that creates a pathway for us to compete that is fair to cis student athletes as well.

The NCAA working group from its Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports has come up with a set of recommendations nearly identical to ones issued in a report by the National Center on  Lesbian Rights and the Women's Sports Foundation. 

Kye Allums emergence as the first open trans athlete in NCAA Division I play has put a face on the issue as well as drawn much needed attention to it.   The IOC and other international sports governing bodies have been changing their policies since 2004 to allow the participation of trans athletes, and it was time for the NCAA o follow suit as well. 

It's always smarter to do so on your own rather than to do so while facing a lawsuit.

Outside of the 110 stealth trans athletes that are alleged to have competed at the NCAA level by Canadian world champion mountain biker Michelle Dumaresq, there has been another open transman who has competed in NCAA competition, but not at the high profile Division I level as Kye Allums is doing. . 

Transman Keelin Godsey was a Division III three discipline track athlete who competed in the hammer throw, shotput and discus at Bates College. He transitioned in 2005 under the same no testosterone parameters that Allums is now using..

On July 7, 2008 he attempted to become the first transperson ever to qualify for a national Olympic team and the Olympic Games in the women's hammer throw competition.    The two time Division III champion's best throw of 65.57 meters in the Olympic Trials left him 10 feet shy of making history and qualifying for the 2008 Beijing Games as he finished in seventh place.   


Under the proposed NCAA trans athlete policy interpretation, a transwoman would be permitted to play on a women’s team if that athlete has undergone testosterone suppression treatment for at least one year.

The member institution would have to provide the NCAA with written documentation of testosterone suppression for the year of treatment and documentation of ongoing monitoring to be eligible to play on a women’s team.

In the instance of a transman such as Allums, the athlete would be permitted to play on a men’s team at any time.

If the athlete wants hormone treatment, however, then the athlete must get a medical exception for the use of testosterone before being eligible to participate in intercollegiate athletics because the substance is on the NCAA’s banned drug list.

Athletes who transition socially, but do not seek hormone treatment, also have the option to compete for their birth-gender team.

Helen J. Carroll, director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights’ sports project said,."I’m very encouraged that the NCAA is moving forward in a positive way including transgendered student-athletes in a way that’s practical and works. It’s a very exciting time for the entire transgendered community.”

Carroll stated that this move by the NCAA may make it easier for transgender athletes to publicly come out about their status now that they know how they can maintain their eligibility to play sports.

I agree with her assessment.. I believe it has been that uncertainty that has kept more collegiate trans athletes from coming out

The NCAA’s national office staff is reviewing the interpretation to determine if it satisfactorily addresses the issue of trans athletes or if there is a need for further legislation to clarify it as official NCAA policy.  .

If the determination is made that further legislation on the issue is warranted, it would be considered by the NCAA member institutions during its upcoming 2011-12 legislative cycle.

Whatever way it transpires, since many of the state level high school athletic governing bodies in the United States follow NCAA rules, it could possibly have a trickle down effect in terms of their policies toward high school athletes in the various states as well.


But Helen Carroll is right.  It is definitely an exciting time for trans athletes currently matriculating in colleges across the nation, because the NCAA is working on a policy that not only allows us to get into the game but be our true selves while doing so.  .