6A - Wednesday, November 13, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'The best damn coach on this campus' By ALEJANDRO ZUNIGA Daily Sports Editor The arched roof of Jenison Fieldhouse in East Lansing once housed Earvin "Magic" Johnson. It hosted Mississippi State and Loyola Chicago in the 1963 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, which helped advance civil rights in one of the nation's most tenuous times. But on a day in January 1976, the dusty court of the hallowed building was disturbed not by the cheers of thousands, but by the methodic pounding of a basketball as Carol Hutchins and the rest of the Michigan State women's bas- ketball team ran through drills. Partway through the practice, a prominent visiting men's Division I squad walked into the building, familiarizing itself with thevenue before a game against the Spar- tans later in the week. Then the visitors stepped onto the court, ignoring Hutchins and her team- mates, and began to warm up. By then, the head coach of the visiting team was quite well- known, and he would go on to enjoy a long career. But when he finally acknowledged Hutchins, his stinging words ultimately came as less of an insult than they were the utterance of a painfully obvious truth. "No one gives a damn about women's basketball." And then he kicked them out. Growing up in Lansing along- side five siblings, Hutchins, now entering her 30th year as the Michigan softball coach, would spend her afternoons and sum- mers outdoors on the playground. She never quite understood why, but she always loved sports. But when her three brothers were old enough to join organized teams, Hutchins didn't have the same options. They went on to Little League, and she had to sit on the bleachers. They played bas- ketball, and she watched from a distance. For lack of a better option, Hutchins enlisted in her school's cheerleading team in middle school and high school, the only varsity sport available to her. It was far from ideal, but it was the only way she could get from the stands onto the field. "I went and cheered for my brothers, even though ISwas better than them," Hutchins said. Girls who wanted to play any other sport had to rely on gym class and sometimes hastily arranged after-school activities - no schedules, no uniforms and no varsityletter. Despite the extent that the law would soon change Hutchins's life, the day Title IX passed in 1972 didn't seem out of the ordinary to the high-school student. Hutchins didn't come home and tell her par- ents that she could soon play orga- nized sports. The implications of Title IX on athletics weren't fully realized until later; after all, it was part of the Educational Amend- ments of 1972 and had no explicit relation to sports. Instead, the 37 words of the law state that no organization that receives federal financial assis- tance can deny benefits to people on the basis of sex. In other words, if a school wanted money from the government, it couldn't discrimi- nate against women. In her senior year, Hutchins's high school handed the girls' bas- ketball team uniforms and a full schedule and promised to make arrangements for away games - commodities it had never offered before. A giddy Hutchins bought her first pair of Adidas Superstar shoes. "I was in heaven," she said. "It just gave us the same opportunity. I don't deserve more opportunity. I just want the same opportunity." At that point, Hutchins was content with enrolling at Michi- gan State, especially since the school demonstrated a progres- sive attitude toward women's sports. Her softball team even won a national championship, though it's only recognized by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, and not the NCAA. At first there were no schol- arships, but no one complained about having to earn playing time as a walk-on. Hutchins didn't COURTESY OF MICHIGAN ATHLETICS Michigan coach Carol Hutchins has been one of the pioneers of Title IX since its inception in 1972. mind that the men had first choice to all of the school's facilities and that the women would be slotted in as an afterthought, if at all. But beyond the lack of avail- able scholarships, there were still countless inequalities between men's and women's sports. The women played at Jenison Field- house just once per year when the Athletic Department scheduled a doubleheader with the men. And in stark contrast to the men, Hutchins and her teammates wore a conglomeration of T-shirts and shorts instead of school- issued practice uniforms. After watching her broth- ers from the sidelines as a child, Hutchins was happy just to play - until, in one moment at Jeni- son Fieldhouse, a men's basketball coach changed her mind. "Whatever the guys had, we were like this," Hutchins said, holding one hand high above the other. "We were always second. Back then, you had athletics and then you had women's athletics." In 1979, Hutchins sued Michi- gan State, alleging that the school provided better housing options on road trips and a higher per diem to male athletes. Two years later, a preliminary injunction barred the university from dis- criminating against the women's basketball team. "Unless you filed suit, there was no reason for an Athletic Depart- ment to change," she said. Former Athletic Director Don Canham hired Hutchins as Mich- igan's assistant softball coach in 1982 and promoted her to the head role three years later. As she remembers with a wry laugh, her initial job description mandated she spend half the day perform- ing clerical work for the Athletic Department. When she finished her office duties, Hutchins had to take care of Alumni Field on her own, bor- rowing the tractor from the base- ball team and driving it herself. Once, she crashed it into the out- field fence. Getting the field watered was a daily struggle. One season, it went weeks without so much as a drop. When it eventually became nearly unplayable, the Athletic Depart- ment finally brought in a fire truck to douse the field. But even if it seemed like she was competing against the base- Call:#734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com HELP WANTED CLINICAL SKILLS TEST tutor USMLE STEP 2, TOEFL, ESL Editing Great rates, (734)-239-0008 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS IN A2 @ Bigalora. Family restaurant special- izing in Neapolitan Pizza & fresh Ita- lian fare. Hiring: line cooks, prep cooks, dishwashers, hostesses, bartenders, managers, servers, bussers. Apply at 3050 Washtenaw, A2, 48104 between lOam-2pm. Opening Day Nov 8, 2013 LOCAL ANN ARBOR Restaurant seeking MANAGERIAL help. Please send resume to P.O. Box 468 Chelsea, MI 48118 NORTHERN MICHIGAN'S PRE- MIER co-ed summer camp is looking for counselors for the 2014 season. Please visit our website to learn more about us, www.campwaldenmi.com To apply just click on "Want a job?" 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There, she noticed that the baseball team had been given a charteredbus. Mean- while, the Athletic Department had offered the softball players vans. "When I first came to Michi- gan, they just wanted to be great in the men's sports," Hutchins said. "It was a very reluctant atmosphere (for the women)." When Bo Schembechler became Athletic Director in 1988, he helped usher in reform for women's athletics at Michigan, a shift that continued under Jack Weidenbach's reign in the early 1990s. For instance, it was because of Schembechler that the softball team finally received enough practice uniforms to wear all week long. And little by little, the resources provided to women's sports began to increase. "There were two things Bo loved: Michigan, and a well-run program," explains historian John U. Bacon, who authored Bo's Lasting Lessons, aswell as several other books about college football. "Hutch was both." Even when Hutchins had to tend to Alumni Field and spend half the day as a secretary, the Wolverines never endured a los- ing season with her in charge. They won their first Big Ten title in 1992 and proceeded to claim two of the next three. And with that came the respect ofthe restnof the University. In October 1996, Bacon and Schembechler drove back togeth- er to Ann Arbor from Grand Rapids, arriving on campus well after everyone had left the ath- letic campus. As they pulled into the parking lot by the old soft- ball facilities, Schembechler saw Hutchins finally walking out of her office for the night. "Look at that!" Bacon remem- bers Schembechler saying. "Ten- thirty at night, and she's working her ass off. That is the best damn coach on this campus." Then he paused, remembering then-football coach Lloyd Carr. "The best women's coach." In 2005, the Michigan softball team made history by becoming the first team east of the Missis- sippi River to win the Women's College World Series. Down by a game in the best-of-three series, the Wolverines clawed back to take the second game. In the 10th inning of the decisive contest, freshman Samantha Findlay hit a three-run shot over the left-field wall to give her team the title. The Wolverines mobbed each other at home plate, and because the triumph was broadcast nationally, millions could watch their accomplishment. After the game, Hutchins cried. "Everyone's all on board now," she said. "Back in those days, it seemed like we were always going to be the second class." When the softball team returned to Ann Arbor that summer, Hutchins's phone was flooded with congratulatory voicemails, and she turned on her computer to hundreds of unread emails. People recognized her when she walked through the city the following day, and Schem- bechler himself waited on a street cornerto greet her. "Hutchins made a big convert out of an old-school guy," Bacon said. Schembechler wasn't the only figure on campus buying into Hutchins's program. Hundreds of miles away in Parry Sound, Ont., hockey coach Red Berenson watched that final game on televi- sion. When it ended, he began to tear up, and at the first coaches' meetinginthe fall, he walked over to Hutchins and asked for a hug. "Why would I care aboutnwom- en's softball?" he said. "This is Michigan women's softball. This is Carol Hutchins." In March, the Michigan soft- ball team will open its home schedule against Bowling Green, unveiling the latest addition to Alumni Field: an AstroTurf sur- face that allows the Wolverines to practice outdoors, even in cold weather. This spring will also mark the completion of a brand-new soft- ball center, a three-story building which will feature locker rooms, fitness centers and hydrotherapy pools. The 10,200-square-foot complex cost $5.3 million alone, while the University spent $2.5 million combined to retrofit the baseball and softball fields with AstroTurf. And Hutchins will be enter- ing her 30th season as leader of that softball team. She's the win- ningestcoach in Michigan history and has twice been named NCAA Coach of the Year. Her teams have finished atop the Big Ten in 16 of the last 21years, including the last six in a row. When the Wolverines beat Northwestern to clinch a first- place finish in the conference last May, many of the 1,800 fans in attendance waited outside Alumni Field to applaud Hutchins as she walked back to the locker room. The relationship between men's and women's sports isn't entirely equal. For example, accordingto a survey by Brooklyn College researchers, more than 97 percent of men's collegiate pro- grams in 2012 were coached by a man. But that same year, only 43 percent of women's teams had female coaches - a 47-percent decrease from 1972, when Title IX was introduced. But it's certainly a step up from being kicked off her home court by a visiting team in East Lansing those dozens of years ago. Despite the flaws, plentyofsigns pointto the amendment's success. Never in the history of collegiate sports have there been more female athletes or more women's programs per school than today. In many ways, Hutchins says, we're closer to equal opportunity than ever before. And the public has responded. The Michigan softball team has been on national TV more than 40 times since 2005, including 14 times in the last two years. Every game of the 2013 Wom- en's College World Series was broadcast on ESPN, and several aired on ESPN International from Africa, to the Middle East, to Latin America. "Look how far we've come. Who would have ever thought that could happen?" Hutchins said. "What makes me smile is seeing where women have come today and the opportunitieswe all have. I don'ttake it forgranted." When the current group of seniors on the Michigan softball team arrived on campusfour years ago, they came to Ann Arbor with access to some of the best athletic facilities in the nation. They all grew up playing sports because the world wasn't tellingthemthey couldn't. But when Hutchins men- tioned Title IX, one of them asked, "what's that?" So Hutchins sat them down and told themher story. 0 0 1 I t I