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Updated: 2:45 PM Dec 1, 2004
Boy Gymnast Looking to Compete on Girl's Gymnastics Team
A SPASH student says it’s not fair he can't compete on the girl’s gymnastics team. He is pushing to change state regulations.
Posted: 9:54 PM Nov 30, 2004Reporter: Karen Kostko |
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Gymnastics is a sport of strength and flexibility. It’s also a sport that's only offered to girls in area high schools. However, a young man from Stevens Point is fighting to change that.
The WIAA has rules in place that prohibit boys and girls from competing on the same team.
One aspiring gymnast in our area is fighting to become an exception to that rule. SPASH junior Keith Bukowski has been studying gymnastics for five years. His school doesn't have a boy’s gymnastics team, so he practices with the girl’s gymnastics team every day, but when they head to meets this season, Keith won't be allowed to compete.
"Based on the number of teams, girls are an under represented gender, so until the numbers get closer, we do not want boys to displace girls from a competitive environment," says Doug Chickering, Executive Director, WIAA.
Keith's coach says she knows how much he wants to compete, but her hands are tied.
"I went to the athletic director who went to WIAA and that’s the answer we were given. We relayed the info, it’s not my call or the athletic director's call," says Jill Suchowski, SPASH gymnastics head coach.
Keith's mom says barring him from competition is unlawful under Title Nine. That's a federal act that says no one should be excluded based on sex from any educational program.
She's already contacted the Federal Youth Department of Instruction and says she'll take it all the way the Supreme Court if she has to.
"If my son graduated and went off to college, I’m not gonna stop this fight," Janine Olszewski says.
"I just think its absolutely unfair that girls can do guys’ sports and guys can't do girls’, my ability may not be up to compete, but I at least want the chance to try," adds Keith Bukowski, male gymnast.
For now, Keith says he'll keep practicing with the girls' team, and even if he can't change the WIAA’s mind, the experience will prepare him to join a men's team when he goes off to college in a couple of years.
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