46% of men say that they were taught by their fathers to play any sport. (WSF Equal Play) Most men sports are a taboo when girls join the team. Take wrestling for example. Clarissa Chun won a medal in the Freestyle Wrestling at the 2008 Colorado Springs Pan American Wrestling Championships. Our first proposition is to combine the teams. If there was one team of volleyball and no boys team, some girls wouldn’t like a guy on the team. They wouldn’t like that he’s probably looking at them and whatnot. Except they’re out for the sport the same way you are. Let them join and be a good part of the team. Most boys are built physically in biceps, therefore having a good left hitter would be a positive. Second solution is have a separation of both genders. Suppose a guy brought a group of boys to make a volleyball team. Get it approved with the athletic director and find coaches. Riverbend …show more content…
You want people to join your team and have fun! Contributing to the team and making more friends. Particular sports would think, “Oh she can’t do it.” Or, “She won’t last.” Negativity is not allowed in sports! You want to bring your team up, not down. My prior experience with the 8th grade wrestling team was a blast. I’m proud to say that they were my team. Wrestling was something that made me feel strong. At little times they had no faith in me, some of them brought me up. I absolutely loved that when I walked onto the mat and into the wrestling room! Since I was a girl, they thought I wouldn’t of lasted out and made it fully through the season, I did and shoved it in their faces. Women are growing in men’s sports today. They are joining soccer, basketball, even wrestling. (Toughest sport) These teams are what give girls hope that they can do whatever they would like to do. In middle school, most teams are biased meaning towards girls or boys. You care about what people think of you rather than doing what you want to