Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Study: Leadership positions for women lacking in FBS

- AARON BEARD

Women remain significan­tly underrepre­sented in leadership positions at the Football Subdivisio­n level of college athletics, a new study shows.

Thursday’s report card from The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport (TIDES) issued another F for gender hiring, a C for racial hiring and an overall grade of D+ for 2022. Those grades largely look as they have in past editions of the study, which have shown leadership positions like president or chancellor, athletic director and conference commission­er are dominated by white men.

TIDES director and lead report author Richard Lapchick called the lack of significan­t change “incredibly discouragi­ng.”

“I felt that there was a shift in attitudes at all levels in sport after the murder of George Floyd and during that period of the racial reckoning,” Lapchick told the The Associated Press. “And the results that just haven’t proven that out in these leadership positions.

Those scores are particular­ly striking when examining gender.

Women made up only 22.9% of presidents and chancellor­s, up slightly from last year’s figure (20.8%) after sitting as low as 13.8% in 2019. The number of women working as athletic directors dropped from 13 to 10

(7.6%) in 2022, with six of those in Power Five conference­s (Duke, Missouri, Pittsburgh, Vanderbilt, Virginia and Washington).

Women now lead two of the FBS’ 10 leagues: Judy MacLeod with Conference USA and the Mountain

West’s Gloria Nevarez, who was hired in November from the West Coast Conference.

“There’s been no sustained improvemen­t to make me think we’ve turned the corner and this is going to get a lot better in the next couple of years,” Lapchick said.

Women fared best in the faculty athletics representa­tive position — 42% for an A-minus grade. These are typically faculty members designated to serve as a liaison to the athletics department.

In all, white people held 79.9% (321 of 402) of leadership positions in the study. But racial hiring scores increased, showing people of color holding 21.4% of president or chancellor positions and 22.9% of AD roles, though it fell for faculty athletics representa­tives (16.4%).

Felicia Martin, the NCAA’s senior vice president for inclusion, education and community engagement, issued a statement that pointed to multiple steps taken by college sports’ governing body to address diversity hiring.

Those include NCAA leadership developmen­t programs for administra­tors and coaches, as well as the Leadership Collective — a database to assist hiring officials in diversifyi­ng their candidate pools.

Still, Martin said: “The report reflects the reality that there is much work that remains in diverse hiring.”

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? Vanderbilt Athletic Director Candice Lee (above) was one of only 10 female athletic directors across the country in 2022. Women remain significan­tly underrepre­sented in leadership positions at the Football Subdivisio­n level of college athletics, according to a report card from The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport that was released Thursday.
(AP file photo) Vanderbilt Athletic Director Candice Lee (above) was one of only 10 female athletic directors across the country in 2022. Women remain significan­tly underrepre­sented in leadership positions at the Football Subdivisio­n level of college athletics, according to a report card from The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport that was released Thursday.
 ?? ?? Nevarez
Nevarez
 ?? ?? MacLeod
MacLeod

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