With gender parity being exactly 50/50 in these Olympics, the women of the U.S. won 65% of their gold medals, and also won a greater percentage of medals overall than the men did. Now it’s not like the American men did bad or anything, but clearly they are a step behind the women, and there’s a few reasons for this.

The first is Title IX: for those unaware, title IX ensures that men and women in the US have equal opportunity in all regards, including sports and athletics. Especially in collegiate sports, there are regulations that colleges must follow to make sure women are given the same opportunity as men, things such as giving out an equal number of scholarships, making sure practice times are equitable, etc… To my knowledge (correct me if I’m wrong), there are not many other countries where this is a thing. So the U.S. women receive much better training and have more opportunities for success compared to other countries, as more money is probably spent on men’s sports in these other countries and they don’t invest in women’s sports as heavily.

But that’s only part of the equation: because why exactly, if the men in the U.S. get the same training and opportunities as the women in the U.S., shouldn’t they be performing just as well? The simple answer as to why they aren’t is football (American football). Football is the number one most invested sport in the U.S., and is played almost exclusively by men. Colleges pour all their money and scholarships into football, which means in order to comply with Title IX, they have to make cuts to some other men’s programs, such as gymnastics, wrestling, volleyball, etc…

Why do you think U.S. women’s gymnastics has always been superior to men’s gymnastics? Well, because if you’re a male athlete in the U.S. and you want a scholarship, chances are you’re more likely to find one playing football, as opposed to gymnastics. Not to say you can’t find one for gymnastics, but it’s much harder. This isn’t the case for women however, as football is not a sport where they get scholarships.

For women’s sports, the funding is more well-rounded. Basketball may get a bit more, but other than that, I’d like to take a guess that the rest of the sports get roughly equal funding, not to mention there aren’t any sports with a significantly higher number of players. However, for men’s sports, football gets a large portion the money, and basketball also get a decent amount. This leaves other men’s sports that are typically in the Olympics in the dust. Not to mention, a football team has about 50-60 players, which eats up much more scholarships for men, and unfortunately, other sports are sacrificed for it.

This is just the culture of the US and it’s not going to change anytime soon. Football generates the most revenue, and so colleges aren’t going to have any incentive to cut funding for football programs. But they will have to keep making more and more cuts to other men’s sports, unless something systematically changes.

As far as I’m aware, in future Olympics, the US women will either keep doing better or remain about the same amount ahead of their competition, whereas the US men will continue to trend downwards and not be as dominant, because colleges and other athletic programs will invest way more into football (a non-Olympic sport) than they will into sports that are part of the Olympics.

  • LopsidedKick9149B
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    2 months ago

    So you want only three sports in the Olympics? Also team USA’s cricket team is quite good. Our soccer teams suck because no one cares about it. Rugby is not a global sport any more than baseball or basketball… typical bias.

    • AndreasDasosB
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      2 months ago

      What? You might have missed what I was saying. I am responding the claim that American football diminishes the US men’s chances. My point is that most countries have some huge disproportionate focus on a sport that is barely or not represented at the Olympics. One medal shot for men’s football out of hundreds of events is hardly tipping the balance (especially given the US women’s football - an advantage there if anything). So the US isn’t disadvantaged by its focus significantly more than other countries.

      quite good

      Ouch. As far as medal shots go? Odd to assume the American team was quite good. If this is based on a once-off victory against Pakistan, the T20 World Cup is not the mainstream cricket WC, most of the star players are Indians who moved there a few years ago and aren’t citizens (unsure how that plays with the IOC), and the US doesn’t even qualify to play in the more serious ICC Cricket World Cup. It’s just… no.

      Basketball has grown to overtake rugby but I never said it wasn’t also international, so no idea what you mean by that.

      typical bias

      Um, typical America-centric bias, then.

    • AndreasDasosB
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      2 months ago

      Honestly had to read again. In just a couple of lines misunderstood, made a bizarre claim and self-obliviously claimed bias. Thus the pigeon plays chess. Ciao