UC Researcher Takes One For The Team As She Examines The Challenges of Women in Professional Football
Women playing full-contact tackle football face challenges beyond the playing field yet theres little research about this niche in athletics. Jennifer Carter, a University of Cincinnati doctoral student in the UC Department of Sociology, will present her research on body maintenance in womens professional football on Aug. 20, at the 107th annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in Denver.
Carter first began her research observing a team in the Womens Football Alliance (WFA), but she then became a defensive back, as she learned firsthand how women condition themselves for such a physically demanding sport.
My own participation in tackle football and observation shows that women players manage their bodies both on and off the playing field through equipment selection, the management of pain and injuries and finally through conditioning and strength training, says Carter.
Carter says women in professional tackle football are not only challenged by size options on their gear, but also by a lack of education when it comes to the proper fit and use of equipment, as well as the time of year when the womens football season is played.
Equipment Challenges
Everything from helmets and shoulder pads to shoes and pants primarily designed for male football players pose issues for women when it comes to finding the right fit, explains Carter, who adds that gear that doesnt fit properly wont properly protect players either.
Playing Season
Carter explains that the two largest womens professional tackle football leagues, the WFA and the Independent Womens Football League (IWFL), play football during the spring season, which is considered by sporting goods stores as the off season for football. Female football players, in turn, are affected by a lack of available equipment at their local stores, as merchants stock up on traditional spring sporting gear for baseball and track, for example.
Conditioning and Strength Training
Carter says weightlifting, cardio-conditioning and participating in football-related drills are a necessary part of organized football for both women and men. For the female teammates in her study, however, Carter found that much of their offseason conditioning was completed without coach or trainer supervision. She found that while the players had access to prime equipment, they had little knowledge or guidance on how to properly use the equipment, therefore increasing their risk of injury and decreasing effectiveness of workouts. She also found that the womens knowledge of football-specific conditioning and strength-training was more limited.
More specific to football, the lack of readily available opportunities for women to play at young ages, especially during high school years, contributes to a lack of knowledge of core training tenants, which young boys and men have often been exposed to over extended periods of time, Carter says.
Carter also states that societal beliefs about womens bodies affect the way they deal with pain and injuries. While visible injuries on the field are dealt with similarly through a culture of sacrifice, off the field, women often face stigma due to visible bruising, cuts, scrapes and other abrasions.
Carter conducted her research during the 2011 and 2012 season as part of her larger dissertation research which is still underway. Carter says the players she studied came from diverse backgrounds and held jobs ranging from engineers, school administrators and nurses to factory workers and cooks. Ages on the team ranged from 18 to 33.
She adds that although this was a professional football league, most of the players do not get paid. In general, players in the national league may earn as little as $1 per game. However, the athletes pay the cost of purchasing uniforms, equipment, field rentals and travel expenses.
Carter says that as the sport continues to attract growing numbers of women, gaining an understanding of offering women more equitable opportunities on how to manage their bodies will become increasingly more important, not only in building talented players but in protecting them from injuries.
Carter was awarded a Charles Phelps Taft Dissertation Fellowship as she continues work on her dissertation. In addition, she received a research award from the Graduate Student Governance Association (GSGA) which helped pay for her uniform, travel and other fees related to her field research.
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