California high school football team forfeits game against team with 2 girl players

Valley Christian Academy continued its trend of forfeiting football games against teams that rostered girls.

Two months after settling a Title IX lawsuit related to forfeiting a game against a football team that rostered a girl, Valley Christian Academy (Santa Maria, Calif.) has forfeited another game for the same reason.

The Lions chose to forfeit the Sept. 30 game against Coast Union (Cambria, Calif.), which has two girls on the team. This is the second year in a row Valley Christian has done so against Coast Union and the fourth consecutive year with a forfeit for this reason, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The 2021 lawsuit, brought forth on behalf of a Cuyama Valley (Calif.) High School girl football player, was settled for a cash amount of $20,000, according to Noozhawk. But Valley Christian was allowed to deny all wrongdoing. Joel Mikkelson, the Valley Christian Academy Superintendent and lead pastor at First Baptist Church, maintains the stance that Title IX does not apply to this situation.

“Title IX is very clear that contact sports are exempt from Title IX,” Mikkelson said to the Los Angeles Times. “That’s the language — contact sports are exempt from Title IX. It is an unfortunate tragedy that that is not understood by most people.”

Section 106.41 (b) of Title IX states in part:

(a) General. No person shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, be treated differently from another person or otherwise be discriminated against in any interscholastic, intercollegiate, club or intramural athletics offered by a recipient, and no recipient shall provide any such athletics separately on such basis.

(b) Separate teams. Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section, a recipient may operate or sponsor separate teams for members of each sex where selection for such teams is based upon competitive skill or the activity involved is a contact sport. However, where a recipient operates or sponsors a team in a particular sport for members of one sex but operates or sponsors no such team for members of the other sex, and athletic opportunities for members of that sex have previously been limited, members of the excluded sex must be allowed to try-out for the team offered unless the sport involved is a contact sport. For the purposes of this part, contact sports include boxing, wrestling, rugby, ice hockey, football, basketball and other sports the purpose or major activity of which involves bodily contact.

The judge dismissed part of the complaint but denied the request to dismiss claims related to Title IX or the Education Code, according to Noozhawk.

Mikkelson told the Times that Valley Christian boys contact sports do not participate in games against teams with girl opponents, but boys teams in non-contact sports do.

He explained to the Times, “this is not about arrogance, this is not about pride, this is not about unfairness.”

In all fairness, we want to treat women with gentleness and respect. And so we want our young men to apply that to the football field,” Mikkelson said. “And we believe football is a violent game, and accordingly, we want them to operate within the rules of football and hit people well. And we don’t want them to do that to a young lady.”

The lawsuit stated that Valley Christian and Cuyama Valley scrimmaged and Valley Christian was unaware there was a girl on the team until she took off her helmet. Two days later, the academy changed its season schedule to avoid teams with a girl player.

The lawsuit accused the school of taking away “her athletic opportunities,” according to Noozhawk.

“This action arises out of the abhorrent, intentional, and gross discrimination against plaintiff, a female student athlete enrolled at Cuyama Valley High School (Cuyama Valley), by defendants’ antiquated, misogynistic ideals and policies through which defendants sought to minimize plaintiff’s athletic ability and deprive her of athletic opportunities strictly due to her gender.”

As for Coast Union, head coach Andrew Crosby told the San Luis Obispo Tribune last year after Valley Christian forfeited and said that he and his team do not see it as “fair.”

“I am upset with VCA’s decision, especially because (Emily Reed and Andrea Aguilar) are being singled out for their gender. It’s not fair and I hope that because of the support of their families, the team, and community, that they can have confidence that we support them.”

Coast Union’s record improved to 2-3, while Valley Christian fell to 4-1 (now 5-1 after a Thursday game).

2 new high school championship girls sports sanctioned in Alabama

The girls flag football season will feature two championship games at Bryant-Denny Stadium on December 6.

While the NFL remains the most popular thing in the country, the industry’s most significant growth is in youth sports and women’s sports.

We got more evidence of that growth this week when the state of Alabama officially approved two new championship sports for high school girls: Flag Football and Wrestling, per Pat Byington at Bama Buzz.

In a statement, the Alabama High School Athletic Association Executive Director Alvin Briggs called it great news.

“This is great news for our girls’ student-athletes… growth we have seen in both sports has been amazing in a very short time.”

Seventy-six schools across the state have approved girls wrestling, and 89 are putting together girls flag football teams. The 2023 Alabama high school girls flag football season will feature two championship games at Bryant-Denny Stadium on December 6.

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RB Bella Rasmussen becomes 1st girl in California history to score 2 TDs in 1 game

Laguna Beach RB Bella Rasmussen made California high school football history by becoming the first girl to score two touchdowns in one game.

In the second quarter of the Laguna Beach (Calif.) game against Santa Ana Valley High (Calif.) on Friday, senior running back Bella Rasmussen accomplished something she told the Los Angeles Times was a childhood dream — scoring a touchdown in a varsity game.

She then did it again.

With those touchdowns, rushes of four yards and one yard in the second quarter of the 48-0 win on Friday, Rasmussen became the first girl in the state to score two touchdowns in a single game, according to Cal-Hi. She is one of eight girls to score a touchdown in a game in California history.

Rasmussen finished the game with 21 yards on eight carries, according to the Orange County Register. The video of her second touchdown was posted to Instagram:

Rasmussen, a running back and defensive end, has played youth football and high school football for the last four years, according to the Los Angeles Times. She said to the outlet:

“To be able to do it was something I had been dreaming about since I was 6 years old … I ran to my mom, ‘I did it.’ I was sobbing when I came off the field I was so excited.”

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Oklahoma high school calls upon two girls to help avoid forfeit

Faced with the proposition of forfeit, two girls at Wewoka High School volunteered to suit up and play in the game on Friday.

Wewoka (Okla.) High School, located about 70 miles southeast of Oklahoma City, is a quintessential small-town school. With less than 200 students total, per MaxPreps, simply getting enough players suited up can be as big a challenge as actually playing the game, similar to what many other schools around the country face. After having to forfeit on Sept. 9 due to a lack of players, the team was facing the same proposition on Friday.

In order to help the Tigers have enough players in uniform, two girls at the school volunteered to step up and play in the game. Wewoka fell 47-14, but they got to get on the field in an evening it otherwise would not have been able to.

The school tweeted out two videos of Davis playing.

She had a punt that appeared to be about 45 yards, and recorded a tackle on a kickoff.

With so much emphasis put on rankings, recruiting and college prospects, it can be tough to remember that the majority of high schoolers who play football simply do so for the love of the game. Even though Wewoka lost, it’s yet another example of people coming together to have a good time and put on a show for their school.

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Watch: Kicker Layna Grassi turns this botched field goal into a touchdown

Come for the highlight. Stay for Grassi getting congratulated by her teammates.

Following the coach’s orders is a prerequisite, but thinking on your feet is what defines some of the greatest athletes. By the looks of it, Phillip Barbour (W.Va) kicker Layna Grassi has a future in football.

Watch Grassi turn an embarrassing botched field goal attempt for her team into a touchdown. Come for the highlight. Stay for Grassi getting congratulated by her teammates.

Grassi also kicked eight extra points and made a 30-yard field goal.

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