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Travel Equity
For College Teams
All travel not created equal for college teams
By Tom Farrey
IOWA CITY, Iowa -- Get above the tranquility of the green-gold acres of
corn as far as the eye can see, and Iowa can be a deceptively wicked place.
Sub-zero temperatures conspire on winter nights with winds that slash across
the plains like funny cars on an open track. Eventually, snow season gives way
to months filled with thunderstorms and tornados.
Rocky Marciano's life came to an end in one of those cornfields when his
single-engine plane fell from the skies. The music ended there as well for Buddy
Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper, in another prop-plane crash. Later, in
1985, three Iowa State runners died when their seven-seat plane dropped into a
tree-lined neighborhood in Des Moines.
For many years, the Iowa women's basketball team was entrusted to similar
tiny aircraft. The Hawkeye women flew to road games in a caravan of four planes,
none of them larger than a nine-seater -- some of them without co-pilots.
"It was kind of scary," said Lindsey Meder, a junior guard last season. "If
something were to happen to the pilot, I mean, what would we do?"
Players and coaches envied the men's team, which the school provided with
larger, more powerful charters. Planes big enough to hold the whole team and
even give many of the players their own rows to stretch out. Planes that,
although often very old, seemed to be made of more than paper when the Midwest
winds kicked up.
"If gender equity is important anywhere, it should be in the area (of
safety)," said Angie Lee, who resigned last year as Hawkeyes coach after five
seasons. "That was tough for kids to swallow -- why we didn't get to fly on the
same planes as the men."
Equity is no longer an issue at Iowa. In an attempt to address an obvious
imbalance, the Hawkeye women this season began using the same national charter
broker as the men's team. They draw from the same fleet of 44- and 50-seat
charters.
But around the country, disparities remain in the ways that men's and women's
teams get from point A to point B. In some cases, it's a matter of safety. More
often, it's a matter of luxury; the men's team flies charter while the women's
team must catch commercial flights at out-of-the-way hubs.
"Coaches are talking about it," said Lisa Bluder, the new Iowa women's coach.
"They're saying that when they re-negotiate their contracts, they're going to
ask for more charter flights and so forth. They're not just talking about their
(coach's) financial package."
Travel budgets hint at the divide. Each year NCAA school fills out standard
forms on gender equity that detail how much is spent on travel, among other
expenses, for each team. ESPN.com requested the most recently filed reports --
those from October 2000 -- from 50 of the most prominent basketball programs in
the nation, plus a few lesser known schools.
Of the 13 schools that shared those forms, 11 spent more on travel for their
men's basketball teams than their women's basketball teams, despite comparable
squad sizes. The most glaring disparities were at Maryland and Virginia, where
roughly twice as much was spent on the men for travel, a category that includes
meals and lodging.
Iowa, before making the switch to larger charters, was right in line with
that trend: $347,430 on the men, $138,669 on the women, according to Larry
Bruner, associate athletic director.
Men's teams more often travel to far-flung locales such as early season
tournaments in Hawaii or New York. That partly explains the higher budgets at
some schools, said Valerie Bonnette, a San Diego-based consultant who works with
schools to evaluate their compliance with Title IX regulations that require
equitable accommodations for women.
Other schools simply figure they should be able to spend more on the men's
team than the women's team if the men, as often happens, make more money,
Bonnette said. However, that's "not an acceptable excuse under Title IX," she
said.
Men's teams are increasingly getting around in high style. On occasion, elite
programs such as Duke even make use of the official charters of NBA teams when
those luxury jets -- with their full-reclining seats and on-board VCRs -- are
available. However, the women's team has yet to use those jets, which can easily
run more than $30,000 per trip.
"We've asked for pro charters but they tell me they haven't been available,"
said Gail Goestenkors, coach of the Duke women's team.
Goestenkors is not complaining. Before she arrived in 1991, coaches were
driving the Duke women to road games in vans. She insisted that at the very
least, the team fly commercial to conference games that were more than three
hours away. Four years ago, they started traveling by charter to those games,
usually using the same larger jets as the men's team.
Progress is palpable -- and not just at Duke. A string of big court victories
by plaintiffs in Title IX cases over the past few years has prodded many schools
to adjust their policies. For instance, Louisiana State's women's basketball
team began traveling in mid-sized charter jets more often after the school lost
a Title IX case in 1996 involving softball and soccer players.
"You get enough lawsuits flying," longtime LSU coach Sue Gunter said, "and it
opens people's eyes."
So, too, does a dead prop. By the start of last season, the Iowa veterans had
come to terms with everything that came with flying on what they considered
their little crop-dusters -- the regular bouts of anxiety, sickness and mid-air
group prayer. No airborne roller-coaster had broken this crew. Not yet.
But on the ground, they made their stand. As they waited on board to take off
from a commuter airport in Milwaukee after the season opener against Marquette
last season, one of the engines on their Piper Navajo had trouble starting. The
lone pilot swore the problem was minor, fixable, nothing that would keep them
from flying back to Iowa City that night.
But nothing seemed to work.
"We were just like, 'Get us off this plane,' " Meder said.
So off they marched, back into the airport. They waited there for one of the
other team planes to fly to Iowa and return to get them. The players got home
later than originally planned, rattled but safe -- and ever more envious of the
men. |