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YSU Bowling Program Cracks Top 25 in February NTCA Poll

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IAA Fan:
In its first year of competition, the Youngstown State women's bowling program has entered the top 25 on The National Tenpin Coaches Association's February poll, the organization announced on Monday.

Youngstown State received votes in the November poll, and it enters the top 25 this month for the first time in program history at No. 24. The Penguins received 70 points in the poll, just six behind No. 23 Valparaiso. St. Francis Brooklyn was 25th with 33 points.

"We have been working very hard this season, and breaking into the Top 25 as a first-year program is a huge accomplishment," YSU head coach Chelsea Gilliam said. "There are a lot of amazing teams out there, and we have had some very tough competition. We are going to continue to push to go even higher."

Nebraska is No. 1 in the poll, followed by Arkansas State, McKendree, Sam Houston State and Vanderbilt. The Penguins have beaten eight teams total that are ranked in the top 25, including Sam Houston State.

Youngstown State begins a busy stretch next weekend at the three-day SFA Stormin' Ladyjack Invitational in Houston, Texas. The Penguins will also bowl in tournaments hosted by Valparaiso, Monmouth and Vanderbilt in the next six weeks.

go guins:

I support these women & coaches for their efforts, but honestly, this sport is an embarrassment on our university.  This is a shame to balance Title 9 participation for women, and I find the NCAA's overbearing interference in individual schools sports offerings ridiculous.

Wick250:
Title IX is not going away.  Universities must deal with it.  Bowling is actually a good way to balance scholarships by gender.  It is cheap, requires little equipment, insurance should be low since it is pretty hard to get hurt doing it, and practice time at a local establishment could even be secured by offering football program advertising in exchange.

I don't bowl, but the "sport" is really no different than golf.  Participants are skilled craftsmen, not athletes.  Not my thing but hardly an embarrassment.

The coach has done a remarkable job with these women, especially when you consider that she is battling a very serious illness simultaneously. 

coachtress:
I actually went to the 2012 NCAA Women's National Bowling Championship in Wickliffe, OH (CLE east side suburb, I live close by).  Was kind of fun, but very long.  Ended up bolting after 3+ hours, but watched the end on ESPNU.

Only problem was, NCAA is sponsored by Coke, but the bowling alley served Pepsi products, so couldn't bring any soft drinks into the tournament seating area.

That said, good luck to the YSU Women's Bowling team.

go guins:

--- Quote from: Wick250 on February 02, 2017, 04:51:39 PM ---Title IX is not going away.  Universities must deal with it.  Bowling is actually a good way to balance scholarships by gender.  It is cheap, requires little equipment, insurance should be low since it is pretty hard to get hurt doing it, and practice time at a local establishment could even be secured by offering football program advertising in exchange.

I don't bowl, but the "sport" is really no different than golf.  Participants are skilled craftsmen, not athletes.  Not my thing but hardly an embarrassment.

The coach has done a remarkable job with these women, especially when you consider that she is battling a very serious illness simultaneously.

--- End quote ---
My embarrassment has nothing to do with the actual sport itself, or the women, or the coaches.  My embarrassment is for the university that actually had some committee sit down and say "ok, what is the cheapest way to get more NCAA women's sports to satisfy some silly rule” And somebody said "hey, women's bowling; no facilities or equipment’s, a few players so transportation in a van, etc."  Everybody around the table said "great" and voted it in.  It's a damn shame and they should share my embarrassment.  Good grief, even Ohio State, (sorry THE Ohio State) doesn't have women's bowling. 
This is NOT putting women's athletics on a par with men's athletics as Title IX intended.  It is a shame to meet a silly rule.

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