Current:Home > MyFlorida State women's lacrosse seeks varsity sport status, citing Title IX -SecureNest Finance
Florida State women's lacrosse seeks varsity sport status, citing Title IX
View
Date:2025-04-17 01:02:51
The Florida State women’s lacrosse team, a club sport at FSU, in consultation with California-based Title IX attorney Arthur Bryant, sent a demand letter Wednesday afternoon to the university's administration, requesting that women’s lacrosse be made into an official varsity sport.
The lacrosse team's request follows a May 2022 USA TODAY investigation into the failings of Title IX, 50 years after the federal law aimed at banning sexual discrimination in higher education was passed. In the letter, Bryant calls FSU's refusal to upgrade lacrosse to a varsity sport "a flagrant violation of Title IX."
Wrote Bryant: "I and my co-counsel have been retained by members of the women’s club lacrosse team at Florida State University ('FSU') because the school has refused to upgrade the team to varsity status in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 ('Title IX'). I hope we can resolve this dispute without the need for litigation, but, if not, we will pursue a sex discrimination class action against FSU for violating Title IX by depriving its female students and potential students of equal opportunities to participate in varsity intercollegiate athletics."
According to a USA TODAY data analysis, Florida State athletics fails Title IX’s proportionality test, meaning the school would need to add nearly 100 female athletes to its athletic department to be in compliance. The women’s lacrosse team, led by longtime player Sophia Villalonga, believes it has a solution for that in making lacrosse a varsity sport.
On July 7, Villalonga, who will start her second year of graduate school in the fall, sent an email to Florida State administrators officially petitioning for women’s lacrosse to be added as a varsity sport. The email included numerous documents that Villalonga and her teammates gathered, including a proposed budget, proposed practice and game schedule, current women’s club lacrosse information and letters of support from lacrosse coaches at Duke and South Florida.
One week later, on July 14, Janeen Lalik, FSU assistant athletic director for external operations, emailed Villalonga back, writing, “at this time, we are not actively evaluating the addition of any sports programs to our current collection of teams.” Shortly after receiving the response, Villalonga and her teammates got Bryant involved.
“Obviously it was a very disappointing response,” Villalonga, the club's president the last two years, told USA TODAY Sports. “This letter we’re sending now is letting them know hey, if you don’t really evaluate this, we’re going to get more involved.”
In May 2022, Florida State athletic director Michael Alford told USA TODAY that FSU “consistently supports” women’s sports, adding that the school most recently added a women’s sport (beach volleyball) in 2011.
Villalonga said she’d always wished lacrosse was a varsity sport at FSU — it would make a huge difference financially — but never realized it was a realistic request until USA TODAY’s Title IX investigation “really opened our eyes.”
“We didn’t have a real understanding before,” she said. “They can say they’re not looking to add a women’s sport but they should be — they’re out of compliance by almost 11 percent! It’s very blatant. Having that big of a gap made us motivated to say hey, there needs to be a fix for this, and women’s lacrosse can be that fix. We’re getting bigger and better every year, we went to nationals the last two years, placed better each year.
“There is such a demand for us to be a varsity sport. We’re hearing from (high school) girls who are interested in joining, who want coaches to come look at them. We don’t have the financials to do that right now; we don’t have the staff.”
But they could, if they had varsity sport status and funding.
Should the lacrosse team get its wish and be made into a varsity sport, Villalonga won’t be around to personally reap the benefits; she’s set to graduate at the end of the 2023-24 school year. She's OK with that.
“I understand this stuff takes time,” Villalonga said. “And even though I wouldn’t be part of the team then, I want to make a difference for the girls who are coming after us.”
Follow sports enterprise reporter Lindsay Schnell
veryGood! (754)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Pink Shares She Nearly Died After Overdose at Age 16
- JetBlue plane tilts back after landing at JFK Airport in New York but no injuries are reported
- Large waves pound the northern Caribbean as Hurricane Tammy spins into open waters
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Tim Burton and Girlfriend Monica Bellucci's Red Carpet Debut Will Take You Down the Rabbit Hole
- Judge orders release of man who was accused of plotting ISIS-inspired truck attacks near Washington
- Ukrainians prepare firewood and candles to brace for a winter of Russian strikes on the energy grid
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- In 'I Must Be Dreaming,' Roz Chast succeeds in engaging us with her dreams
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Missing submarine found 83 years after it was torpedoed in WWII battle
- Lupita Nyong'o Pens Message to Her “Heartbreak” Supporters After Selema Masekela Breakup
- Taylor Swift's 'Eras' wins box office as 'Killers of the Flower Moon' makes $23M debut
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Here's what 'wealthy' means in 2023 America, in five numbers
- ‘Superfog’ made of fog and marsh fire smoke blamed for traffic pileups, road closures in Louisiana
- Gwyneth Paltrow has new line of Goop products, prepares for day 'no one will ever see me again'
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
How women finally got hip-hop respect: 'The female rapper is unlike any other entertainer'
John Stamos says he caught ex Teri Copley cheating on him with Tony Danza: 'My worst nightmare'
Britney Spears' Full Audition for The Notebook Finally Revealed
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
CVS pulls certain cold medicines from shelves. Here's why
Search continues for Nashville police chief's estranged son after shooting of two officers
A Swiss populist party rebounds and the Greens sink in the election. That’s a big change from 2019