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Sports
Related: About this forumAn open letter to Caitlin Clark
Dear Caitlin Clark:
I just want to thank you for all that youve done for girls sports. Ive been a sports fan for all of my long life, and I can count on one hand the number of times that I have witnessed a phenomenon such as the one that you have created.
Other than the LA teams that I grew up rooting for or the Arizona ones that I now call my favorites, Iowa has always held a special place in my heart. My high school team wore the same black-and-gold color scheme as the Hawkeyes. My mom grew up in Iowa and several of her brothers played sports in high school and college in Iowa and Nebraska. My uncle, Alfonso DiMarco, was a star quarterback at the University of Iowa. He would later become a Hall of Fame high school football coach and athletic director at Dowling High School, your alma mater.
I could tell you horror stories about the days before Title IX. I had twin sisters who were great softball players. They won the LA high school championship when they were sophomores. Right before the start of their junior-year season, their coach died unexpectedly. Instead of conducting a quick search for a new coach, the schools administration just canceled the season.
A year later, the school still hadnt hired a coach (it was just a girls sport, after all), so, at the age of 18, I coached them for free. We won the championship, but unlike the football banquet that the school paid for at the fancy hotel, we went to that new In-N-Out place that had just opened.
I just want to thank you for all that youve done for girls sports. Ive been a sports fan for all of my long life, and I can count on one hand the number of times that I have witnessed a phenomenon such as the one that you have created.
Other than the LA teams that I grew up rooting for or the Arizona ones that I now call my favorites, Iowa has always held a special place in my heart. My high school team wore the same black-and-gold color scheme as the Hawkeyes. My mom grew up in Iowa and several of her brothers played sports in high school and college in Iowa and Nebraska. My uncle, Alfonso DiMarco, was a star quarterback at the University of Iowa. He would later become a Hall of Fame high school football coach and athletic director at Dowling High School, your alma mater.
I could tell you horror stories about the days before Title IX. I had twin sisters who were great softball players. They won the LA high school championship when they were sophomores. Right before the start of their junior-year season, their coach died unexpectedly. Instead of conducting a quick search for a new coach, the schools administration just canceled the season.
A year later, the school still hadnt hired a coach (it was just a girls sport, after all), so, at the age of 18, I coached them for free. We won the championship, but unlike the football banquet that the school paid for at the fancy hotel, we went to that new In-N-Out place that had just opened.
https://www.tucsonweekly.com/tucson/an-open-letter-to-caitlin-clark/Content?oid=35402929
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An open letter to Caitlin Clark (Original Post)
Ptah
Mar 2024
OP
mopinko
(73,419 posts)1. i've got a nephew in the hawkeye band. good kid.
ProfessorGAC
(76,119 posts)2. What Does He Play?
I knew a few guys that played in their college bands. They were really good players. Have to be pretty darned good to be in a college band
