Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Law creates spots for internatio­nal athletes

- DANIELLA MATAR AND TERESA M. WALKER

MILAN — For Maria Bulanova, it was a matter of surprise — that she could be recruited to the bowling team at Vanderbilt “all the way from Russia.”

Like other internatio­nal athletes playing college sports in the United States, she had little sense of Title IX when she was younger. But the federal law has opened the door for thousands of female athletes from abroad to get an American education and possibly a shot at a life and career in the United States.

“People were surprised that Vanderbilt was able to recruit me all the way from Russia,” Bulanova said. “They were like, ‘Oh, wow. Their recruiting is really diverse.’ Like, ‘Wow. They saw you all the way from there.’ ”

Bulanova was looking to bowl in Europe after finishing her last year of school in Russia. In November 2015, she represente­d Russia in the World Cup in Las Vegas and bowled well enough that several American colleges wanted her to visit. She visited five colleges in one week in February 2016 before choosing Vanderbilt.

“What really made them stand out is obviously the education. And I was also looking for a good bowling program where I know that we’re going to win something, we’re going to be in competitio­n for the national championsh­ip. So Vanderbilt had both, and that was perfect,” said Bulanova, who graduated in 2020 and is now in her second year competing on tour with the Profession­al Women’s Bowling Associatio­n. She is also working on a master’s degree at St. Francis in New York, where she is an assistant coach.

Bulanova helped Vanderbilt win its second national championsh­ip in women’s bowling in 2018. There were also two other internatio­nal players: Kristin Quah of Singapore and Emily Rigney of Australia.

Coach John Williamson started the Vanderbilt bowling program in 2004, building off a club team, and has three national runner-up finishes in addition to the two national championsh­ips.

“From a Title IX standpoint, I like to think that we’re a success story of it because we’re able to take kids from around the U.S., around the globe that wouldn’t have had the opportunit­y to come to Vanderbilt, or even thought about going to Vanderbilt, and getting them to come to campus and so they get a world class education,” Williamson said.

“They get to compete at a really high level. And they get to do their sport. They get to get their education. They get sort of the best of everything.”

Quah was the first of the three to play for Vanderbilt after she reached out to the university by email while playing for the Singapore junior national team. Williamson and an assistant went to the world youth championsh­ips in Hong Kong and saw Quah bowl along with Bulanova and Rigney. Quah’s first year at Vanderbilt was 2015. Bulanova and Rigney started the following year.

“So basically, like Kristin emailing us, expressing her interest, got us talking to her, which then got us to Hong Kong, which then got us to find Maria,” Williamson said.

Bulanova and Quah got scholarshi­ps via a direct route, but it can be a more expensive process for others.

Several agencies exist to help foreign athletes by putting them in contact with coaches and universiti­es, as well as assisting them through the bureaucrat­ic process once they get accepted.

Deljan Bregasi founded one such agency. Originally from Albania, Bregasi grew up in Italy before moving to study in Miami and then New York on soccer scholarshi­ps.

Bregasi set up USA College Sport in 2015 in Boston and said he has helped obtain scholarshi­ps for about 300 athletes, charging $3,200 for the agency’s services.

The agency originally focused on helping boys in Italy and Albania get soccer scholarshi­ps in the United States before expanding to other sports and female athletes in 2018.

Aline Krauter and Tze-Han (Heather) Lin left their homelands to play college golf in the U.S., opportunit­ies made possible, in large part, by Title IX.

A superb junior player from Stuttgart, Germany, Krauter had no opportunit­y to play collegiate­ly in Europe, so she moved to Florida and spent three years at Saddlebroo­k Prep in Wesley Chapel. She ended up playing four seasons at Stanford, winning the national team championsh­ip last month as a senior.

Tze-Han was a top junior player in Taiwan when she was recruited by then firstyear Oregon Coach Derek Radley. She ended up being the cornerston­e of a team that would add two more Taiwanese players and that finished second at this year’s national championsh­ips.

“The NCAA, having the same number of scholarshi­ps for men and women for sure allowed me to play golf and get the full scholarshi­p,” said Tze-Han, who finished fifth in the NCAA individual championsh­ips. “I don’t think I would have gotten that anywhere else in the world.”

 ?? (Vanderbilt Athletics via AP) ?? Russia’s Maria Bulanova, who was recruited by Vanderbilt for its bowling team in 2016, is one of thousands of female athletes who were able to get an American education and a shot at a life and career in the United States through Title IX.
(Vanderbilt Athletics via AP) Russia’s Maria Bulanova, who was recruited by Vanderbilt for its bowling team in 2016, is one of thousands of female athletes who were able to get an American education and a shot at a life and career in the United States through Title IX.

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