The Charger Blog

Internationally Recognized Athletics Administrator Discusses Gender Inequality in Sports

Dr. Donna A. Lopiano, an advocate and national expert on gender equity in sport, says that despite decades of progress, the score is still not even when it comes to men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 sports.

April 10, 2019

By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications

Image of Dr. Donna A. Lopiano
Dr. Donna A. Lopiano is an internationally recognized athletics administrator and a leading advocate on gender equity in sport.

Jalynn Finnie 鈥22 a member of the AV天堂网鈥檚 , identified with many of the points that Dr. Donna A. Lopiano, an internationally recognized athletics administrator, made while addressing the University community.

"As a female student athlete, I knew that there was a gender gap," said Finnie, an international business major. "Dr. Lopiano鈥檚 talk helped me to realize how far we have come as a society, but that we still have a long way to go. Her talk was very inspiring."

"It is not enough to whine about something that鈥檚 not right 鈥 you have to change it."Dr. Donna A. Lopiano

As part of the Allen Sack Lecture Series 鈥 named in honor of the longtime-professor who founded the University鈥檚 sport management program 鈥 Lopiano, the former CEO of the Women鈥檚 Sports Foundation and the president and founder of the consulting firm Sports Management Resources, told her own story about how she was not allowed to play baseball as a child because she was a girl.

Suggesting that fear has been at the root of women鈥檚 exclusion from sports, Lopiano discussed societal beliefs that women were physiologically incapable of playing sports, and that female athletes would become "manly."

"It is not enough to whine about something that鈥檚 not right 鈥 you have to change it," said Lopiano. "It takes three generations 鈥 60 years 鈥 to manage cultural change. It requires persistence over time."

"I think the bigger issue is that we need to address inequality by looking at how we talk about women鈥檚 sports as a whole."Najaya Royal 鈥20

Calling for societal changes and more opportunities for high school students to play sports, Lopiano said that the media鈥檚 coverage of women鈥檚 athletics must also change.

Najaya Royal 鈥20, a communication major, agreed with her message.

"I wasn鈥檛 surprised by what Dr. Lopiano鈥檚 said," said Royal. "We need to change many aspects of how we communicate, and we need more racial and gender representation in sports. I think the bigger issue is that we need to address inequality by looking at how we talk about women鈥檚 sports as a whole."