Santa Cruz Sentinel

Landmark game for women in sports

SJSU’s Marie Tuite, Ball State’s Beth Goetz and bowl executive Kym Adair make history

- By Bud Geracie

San Jose State already has made history at the Arizona Bowl, where the Spartans hope to complete their undefeated season Thursday against Ball State.

It will be the first bowl game ever to feature two female athletic directors and a female bowl director. The odds of that happening might be longer than San Jose State and Ball State facing each other in a bowl game, considerin­g that both had just three winning seasons over the previous 23 years.

But here they are — the Spartans (7- 0), the Cardinals (6-1), their athletic directors Marie Tuite and Beth Goetz, in a bowl game run by a woman named Kym Adair.

SJSU’s Tuite and her Ball State counterpar­t, Goetz, are two of the 11 women working as athletic directors at FBS-level school; there are 130 of them. Adair is one of three women serving as executive director of a bowl game; there are 45 of them.

“It’s so exciting, and the best part about it is it happened organicall­y,” Adair told Caitlin Schmidt of the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson, where the game will be held.

“I think that’s a great story for women to know. There are lots of women in sports leadership and starting to converge. There are spaces for everyone that loves sports.” – Kym Adair, Arizona Bowl executive director

“I think that’s a great story for women to know. There are lots of women in sports leadership and starting to converge. There are spaces for everyone that loves sports.”

Last month, in Major League Baseball, Kim Ng was named the Miami Marlins’ general manager, becoming the highest-ranking female executive in a major American sports league.

Last season, Alyssa Nakken became the first woman on a Major League Baseball coaching staff, hired by the Giants.

Katie Sowers is completing her fourth season as an offensive assistant on the 49ers coaching staff and last February became the first woman to coach in a Super Bowl.

Last month, Vanderbilt kicker Sarah Fuller became the first woman to play and score in a major college football game.

“So many women interested in sports don’t think there’s a spot for them at the table,” Adair told the Daily Star. “It’s important to get the message out that there is.”

“If I could, I’d tell my younger self to have more confidence that I could become an athletic director,” said Tuite, 67. “I didn’t see a path of opportunit­y. There were so few women managing athletic programs, in particular in college.”

Tuite played field hockey and basketball at Central Michigan University; she is enshrined in the school’s sports Hall of Fame. She was an assistant AD at the University of Washington — she’d also held that title at Cal — when San Jose State hired her in 2010 as senior associate athletic director and CEO of the athletic department.

Tuite was named SJSU’s athletic director in May 2017. Since then, the pool of women who hold the position has grown by only two — a situation she finds “puzzling and disappoint­ing.”

Goetz, hired as Ball State’s athletic director in 2018, played soccer for Brevard College and at Clemson. She held high-ranking positions in athletic department­s at Butler and at the University Minnesota from 2008-15, but never the top spot except for one year as interim AD.

She’s “thrilled” to be making history “and to do that with two incredible leaders like Marie and Kym is a really wonderful culminatio­n of events,” Goetz said.

When Goetz got the job at Ball State, she also got a hand-written note from Tuite. The group of female AD’s is small in number but big on support.

“We’re presidents of each other’s fan clubs,” Tuite told the Tucson paper. “We’re cheering for each other and we’re there for each other when speed bumps come up.”

T hursday, they ’ ll be cheering for their own teams.

 ?? PHOTO BY ETHAN MILLER — GETTY IMAGES ?? San Jose State Spartans AD Marie Tuite, center, looks up as players, including quarterbac­k Nick Starkel (17) and defensive lineman Cade Hall (92), hold up the championsh­ip trophy after defeating the Boise State Broncos 34-20to win the Mountain West Football Championsh­ip at Sam Boyd Stadium on Dec. 19in Las Vegas.
PHOTO BY ETHAN MILLER — GETTY IMAGES San Jose State Spartans AD Marie Tuite, center, looks up as players, including quarterbac­k Nick Starkel (17) and defensive lineman Cade Hall (92), hold up the championsh­ip trophy after defeating the Boise State Broncos 34-20to win the Mountain West Football Championsh­ip at Sam Boyd Stadium on Dec. 19in Las Vegas.

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