Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Capture The Flag

Women’s football quickly becomes popular sport on NAIA campuses

-

FREMONT, Neb. — From a distance, it looks like college kids in sweat clothes tossing a football around on a campus green space.

Draw closer, and it’s apparent this is no sandlot game.

A coach is explaining routes he wants receivers to run on a play he calls “Bingo.” Then he tells his quarterbac­ks to make quicker decisions. Next he demonstrat­es how a receiver in motion sets up as a blocker next to the center and the running back takes a handoff and heads for a hole that should open on the left side.

The women Jaison Jones is coaching listen intently and ask lots of questions. More than half showed up at Midland University from faraway places to continue playing the growing sport of flag football at the 1,600-student school in a town of 26,000 nestled in the farmland of eastern Nebraska.

Allison Maulfair and Spencer Mauk were teammates at their high school in Bradenton, Fla., a state where a nation-high 7,700 girls at 278 schools play varsity flag football. Jones recruited them at summer showcase, and after Maulfair and Mauk made the 1,500-mile drive to Fremont for a visit, they decided it was where they wanted to be.

“I’m just really passionate about this sport,” Maulfair said. “I fell in love with it my freshman year of high school and haven’t stopped loving it. It doesn’t matter where I’m at. It just matters playing the game with great people, really.”

E’leseana Patterson figured she was done with flag football after she quarterbac­ked her Las Vegas high school team to a state championsh­ip in 2019. Her plan was to stay home, help her mom and take classes at UNLV.

On a lark, she went to a showcase in Vegas and ended up impressing Jones. She took a virtual campus tour and knew she wanted to be part of what was happening at Midland, as did four other players she competed against in high school.

“Once my mom saw someone wanted me to play the sport I love, she was like, ‘Go,’ ” Patterson said. “I took the chance and came out here. I’d never heard of Midland University. I heard of Nebraska, I heard of Omaha. Not Fremont.”

Women’s flag football is in its first year of competitio­n in the National Associatio­n of Intercolle­giate Athletics. The NAIA entered a partnershi­p with the NFL and Reigning Champs Experience­s, which operates flag football programs across the country.

It’s classified as an emerging sport, meaning there’s no NAIA-sponsored championsh­ip. Championsh­ip status is achieved once there are 40 programs, a threshold flag football could reach in two or three years.

The National Junior College Athletic Associatio­n recently announced a similar partnershi­p with the NFL and Reigning Champs and intend to start games in spring 2022.

The sport is played seven on seven on a field 80 yards long and 40 yards wide. There are four 12-minute quarters. It’s 20 yards instead of 10 for a first down. All players are eligible receivers. Players are “tackled” when a defender pulls one of the three flags attached to the ball carrier’s belt.

Midland and 12 other small schools received $15,000 in seed money from the NFL. That’s about half of what it costs per year to operate a program, according to the NAIA, but doesn’t include cost of scholarshi­ps.

Midland offers 33 sports and more than 70% of its students are athletes. The Warriors have 14 flag football players, and all pay more in tuition than they receive in scholarshi­p aid. Athletic director Dave Gillespie said he expects a strong return on investment.

“You’re talking about kids who love playing the sport and probably didn’t think they would have the opportunit­y to combine it with getting a college degree,” Gillespie said. “I think that’s a strong pull.”

Jones, 40, played smallcolle­ge football in Kansas and is defensive coordinato­r for an Omaha women’s semipro tackle football team in the summer.

“The sport is going to flourish more than what people think,” Jones said. “I was in Tampa for a showcase about a month ago and there were about 1,500 girls there. You come back to the Midwest and people question you, like, ‘Girls play flag football in college? Is that a thing?’ ”

Maulfair, the receiver and cornerback from Florida, said the pull of the sport was too strong. Her parents and siblings weren’t going to hold her back.

“They didn’t know where I was going to go,” Maulfair said, “but once they found out I was going to commit, they were stoked.”

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? Ottawa defensive end Jennifer Anthony, left, tackles Midland’s JaNasia Spand in a recent women’s flag football game in Ottawa, Kan. Women’s flag football is an emerging sport in the NAIA.
Associated Press photos Ottawa defensive end Jennifer Anthony, left, tackles Midland’s JaNasia Spand in a recent women’s flag football game in Ottawa, Kan. Women’s flag football is an emerging sport in the NAIA.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States