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Stephen F. Austin, Facing Title IX Suit, Counts on Cheer and Dance

Stephen F. Austin State University—which in May announced plans to eliminate its women’s beach volleyball, golf and bowling programs—is now attempting to fend off a resulting Title IX lawsuit by arguing that its competitive cheerleading and dance teams should be counted toward its compliance with federal gender-equity laws. This comes despite the fact that neither […]

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Stephen F. Austin State University—which in May announced plans to eliminate its women’s beach volleyball, golf and bowling programs—is now attempting to fend off a resulting Title IX lawsuit by arguing that its competitive cheerleading and dance teams should be counted toward its compliance with federal gender-equity laws. This comes despite the fact that neither activity is recognized by the NCAA as a championship or emerging women’s sport.

In a motion filed this week seeking to avoid a preliminary injunction against the program cuts, the Texas-based public university—represented by the state’s attorney general—argued that cheer and dance should be considered legitimate athletic opportunities, effectively equivalent to NCAA-sanctioned sports.

The Division I university is currently being sued by six former beach volleyball players and bowlers who say that their programs’ elimination violates federal law and have “exacerbated” the university’s longstanding pattern of Title IX noncompliance. Along with their civil complaint, the plaintiffs filed an emergency motion asking the court to enjoin the school from eliminating the teams until the litigation has been resolved.

SFA’s defense mirrors a failed attempt by Quinnipiac University nearly 15 years ago, when it tried to replace its women’s volleyball team with a varsity competitive cheer squad to satisfy Title IX.

In Biediger v. Quinnipiac, members of the women’s volleyball team sued after the school announced plans to eliminate its varsity sports teams for women’s volleyball, men’s golf and men’s outdoor track and field, while adding a new varsity sports team for women’s competitive cheer. Both a district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reasoned that competitive cheer does not count as a sport for purposes of Title IX, as it failed to provide sufficient athletic opportunities.

The courts pointed to several key factors in determining that Quinnipiac’s competitive cheer team didn’t satisfy Title IX requirements. They included its absence of off-campus recruiting, frequent competition against club and non-varsity teams, an open-invitational postseason format instead of a recognized championship structure, and disparities in facilities and insurance. 

As a result, Quinnipiac was ordered to keep its volleyball team intact, while its competitive cheer squad—and those at other schools—eventually evolved into the collegiate sport of acrobatics & tumbling. That sport, along with the cheer-like discipline of stunt, recently received NCAA committee recommendations for championship status by 2027.

More recently, a federal court in Kentucky rejected the University of Kentucky’s argument that its competitive cheerleading and dance teams—which, like those at SFA, operate under UK’s athletic department—should count towards Title IX. U.S. District Judge Karen K. Caldwell noted that neither activity is NCAA-sanctioned or -recognized nor has ever been recognized for gender-equity purposes by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR).

Ultimately, Caldwell ultimately sided with the University of Kentucky, denying the plaintiffs’ request to force the school, under Title IX, to elevate its club women’s lacrosse, field hockey or equestrian programs to varsity status. (That case, Niblock et al v. University of Kentucky et al, is currently under appeal.)

Despite these precedents, Stephen F. Austin is hoping a federal judge in Texas may view cheer and dance, specifically, and Title IX, more broadly, in a vastly different light.

“SFA’s cheer and dance teams can, and should, be counted in its participation numbers because they are 1) structured and administered consistent with other varsity sports at SFA, and 2) they prepare for and engage in competition in a manner consistent with other SFA varsity sports,” the university wrote in its court filing this week.

The motion also emphasized that SFA’s cheer and dance programs have collectively won 39 national championships—though none of them recognized by the NCAA—which represents one-third of the university’s total sports titles.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights’ three-part test for Title IX compliance, which SFA acknowledges has been “universally accepted” by federal courts for decades, includes: 1) gender proportionality in athletic participation; 2) a demonstrated history of expanding programs for the underrepresented sex; and 3) evidence that the institution is effectively accommodating the interests and abilities of that group with its current sports offerings.

Attached to SFA’s motion is a 2024 analysis conducted on behalf of the university by Title IX consultant Helen Grant, whose findings appear to undercut the school’s legal position.

In her final report from January—four months before SFA announced the elimination of its three women’s teams and its men’s golf program—Grant concluded that the school was already failing to meet the first two prongs of the Title IX compliance test and expressed skepticism about the third.

“Because the female undergraduate enrollment rate is high (63%), Test 1 Substantial Proportionality compliance will be difficult with the current sport offerings,” Grant wrote.

She also noted that the university had not added a new women’s sport since launching women’s beach volleyball in 2019, and therefore was not demonstrating a “continuing practice of program expansion,” in the view of OCR. (Previously, SFA added women’s equestrian in 2005, only to eliminate it three years later.)

As for the third prong—accommodating student interest and ability—Grant cautioned that it would be “difficult to confirm” whether the university was satisfying this requirement without conducting a survey. However, she recommended delaying such a survey until after the 2025–2026 academic year, citing anticipated roster limits tied to the House v. NCAA settlement.

Nevertheless, SFA contends that the Supreme Court’s decision last summer in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo—which narrowed a four-decade precedent of deference to federal agency interpretations of regulatory law—effectively nullifies OCR’s longstanding three-part test and the requirement for “substantially proportionate” athletic opportunities.

“The Supreme Court has made clear that it is the judiciary’s role to evaluate whether SFA complies with the statute,” the university argued in its motion. “Title IX mandates equal opportunity, not equal outcomes. This Court should not utilize an agency created three-part test to determine SFA’s compliance with Title IX.”

This interpretation of Loper Bright, however, is subject to rebuttal. The decision overruled the Supreme Court’s 1984 ruling in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which held that courts were obligated to defer to agency interpretation when a statute was ambiguous and when the accompanying agency interpretation was reasonable or permissible. This means that a statute that is clear, rather than ambiguous, is not impacted by Loper Bright. To the extent the three-part Title IX test is viewed as clearly expressed, the Supreme Court’s ruling might not help SFA.

Also, while the university claims that the supporting Title IX cases cited by the plaintiffs predate Loper Bright, it omits mention of Judge Caldwell’s decision in the Kentucky case—issued five months after the ruling.

“The school’s filing is astonishing,” said attorney Arthur Bryant, who is representing the athletes along with Colorado-based Title IX lawyer John Clune and local Texas counsel James L. Souter. “It admits the courts have ‘universally accepted’ the (OCR)’s three-part test for measuring whether women and men are being provided with equal opportunities to participate in varsity athletics and urges this court to ignore the test. It contains the report of SFA’s own Title IX expert, Helen Grant, which says it is in violation of the three-part test, and it argues that SFA’s cheer and dance teams should be counted as varsity sports when they aren’t.”

The plaintiffs are due to file their response to the court next week.



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Dávid Bethlehem Tops Global Rankings in Open Water Swimming

Silver medalist Dávid Betlehem at the award ceremony for the three-km knockout race at the World Aquatics Championships on July 19, 2025 Among male open water swimmers, Dávid Betlehem leads the newly released world rankings of World Aquatics, according to the international federation for aquatic sports. The 21-year-old Hungarian athlete improved his previous position by […]

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Silver medalist Dávid Betlehem at the award ceremony for the three-km knockout race at the World Aquatics Championships on July 19, 2025

Among male open water swimmers, Dávid Betlehem leads the newly released world rankings of World Aquatics, according to the international federation for aquatic sports.

The 21-year-old Hungarian athlete improved his previous position by four places and replaced last year’s Olympic champion Kristóf Rasovszky at the top of the rankings.

As reported by Hungary Today, Betlehem finished second in the three-km knockout sprint race at the World Championships in Singapore last week, and won a bronze medal with his team. Hungarian open water swimmers made history, as the delegation finished the World Championships with three medals for the first time.

Hungary’s Rasovszky is currently third in the rankings, with Germany’s Florian Wellbrock moving up to second place after making sporting history in Singapore by winning gold medals in every event (3 km knockout, 5 km, and 10 km races, as well as in the team competition).

World Championship bronze medalist Bettina Fábián slipped from third to sixth place, with Australia’s Moesha Johnson leading the way after winning both the 5 and 10 km races in Singapore.

Via MTI, Featured image: MTI/Koszticsák Szilárd





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Grant Steen – Stanford Cardinal

Highly-regarded sports performance coach Grant Steen joined Stanford’s sports performance staff prior to the 2016 season. Steen assists with all aspects of the Cardinal football program under Kissick Family Director of Sports Performance Shannon Turley. Steen, an accomplished student-athlete at Iowa and former professional football player, came to The Farm after stops at USC, Washington and Hawaii. At USC, […]

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Highly-regarded sports performance coach Grant Steen joined Stanford’s sports performance staff prior to the 2016 season. Steen assists with all aspects of the Cardinal football program under Kissick Family Director of Sports Performance Shannon Turley.

Steen, an accomplished student-athlete at Iowa and former professional football player, came to The Farm after stops at USC, Washington and Hawaii.
 
At USC, Steen served as the football program’s head assistant strength and conditioning coach from 2014-16. He was responsible for the design and implementation of a comprehensive performance training program including all aspects of strength, power, speed, agility, plyometrics, position specific drills and position specific conditioning. Steen helped develop a corrective exercise protocol for injured players, and implemented recovery and regeneration modalities for all in-season and off-season training.
 
During his stint at Washington from 2013-14, Steen was the Huskies’ assistant strength and conditioning coach. He helped oversee all aspects of strength, speed, agility, conditioning, corrective exercise and nutrition for the football program, while coordinating all aspects of sports performance for the men’s tennis team.
 
Steen was the assistant coordinator for football at Hawaii from 2010-13, while also directing all aspects of sports performance for men’s basketball, men’s volleyball, women’s volleyball, men’s tennis, and men’s and women’s golf. The football team shared a WAC title in 2010.
 
Steen helped guide Brophy College Prep in Phoenix to back-to-back state title berths, and one championship (2007) as an assistant coach.
 
During his playing career at Iowa, the Hawkeyes were 31-18 and won the 2002 Big Ten title. He helped lead the Hawkeyes to two bowl games. Steen also established a single-game record with three pass interceptions in a 2002 win at Indiana, tying the NCAA record for linebackers.
 
After earning All-Big Ten honors at Iowa as a junior in 2002 and 2003 as an outside linebacker, Steen spent four years playing professional football with the New England Patriots, Montreal Alouettes and Arizona Rattlers. 
 
Steen earned a bachelor’s degree from Iowa in 2003 and a master’s degree in education administration from Hawaii in 2013.
 
Steen is a certified strength and conditioning specialist (C.S.C.S.) by the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), is Sports Performance Certified by United States Weightlifting (USAW), and also a member of the Collegiate Strength Coaches Association (CSCCa).
 
Steen was born in Emmetsburg, Iowa, and came to the Bay Area with his wife, Rebekah, and son, Levi. His father, Tom, is a retired hall of fame high school football coach in Iowa.



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OVC Volleyball and Beach Volleyball Teams Earn AVCA Team Academic Award

• Complete AVCA Release Several Ohio Valley Conference volleyball and beach volleyball squads have earned the AVCA Team Academic Award sponsored by INTENT.   Eastern Illinois, Lindenwood, Little Rock, Morehead State, Southeast Missouri, Southern Indiana, Tennessee Tech and Western Illinois were honored. Morehead State and Southeast Missouri each earned the honor for the 17th straight year. […]

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• Complete AVCA Release

Several Ohio Valley Conference volleyball and beach volleyball squads have earned the AVCA Team Academic Award sponsored by INTENT.
 
Eastern Illinois, Lindenwood, Little Rock, Morehead State, Southeast Missouri, Southern Indiana, Tennessee Tech and Western Illinois were honored.

Morehead State and Southeast Missouri each earned the honor for the 17th straight year. Both programs were also named to the Team Academic Honor Roll.

Chattanooga, Lindenwood, Morehead State and Tennessee Tech beach squads also earned recognition.

 

The award, initiated in the 1992–93 academic year, honors volleyball teams that maintain a year-long grade-point average of 3.3 on a 4.0 scale or 4.1 on a 5.0 scale. The additional distinction of Team Academic Honor Roll celebrates programs in the top 20% of GPAs for their division.





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Public invited to release of rescued, rehabbed turtle

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A rescued and rehabbed green sea turtle, or honu, is heading home. The Hawaii Marine Animal Response (HMAR) is inviting the public to see a turtle release at Fort DeRussy at 10 a.m. Saturday. The nonprofit said that it recommends arriving at around 9:30-9:45 a.m. The release will take place near the […]

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HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A rescued and rehabbed green sea turtle, or honu, is heading home.

The Hawaii Marine Animal Response (HMAR) is inviting the public to see a turtle release at Fort DeRussy at 10 a.m. Saturday.

The nonprofit said that it recommends arriving at around 9:30-9:45 a.m. The release will take place near the beach volleyball courts on the Diamond Head side of the beach.

HMAR said the honu, dubbed OA-195, was found with a deep fishing line entanglement around its front flipper. It was brought to the HMAR Care Center for rehab and treatment and was recently cleared to return to the ocean.

Organizers remind the public to be respectful of the turtle by giving space to the release area and HMAR staff, helping ensure a calm and smooth release to the ocean.



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USC Women’s Water Polo Has 14 Trojans On ACWPC Academic Honor Roll

The Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches has announced its annual All-Academic Awards list, with 14 USC women’s water polo players picking up top honors for their academic efforts. Leading the powerful group of Women of Troy are four-time honorees Tilly Kearns, Sally McCarthy and Isabel Zimmerman. Four more Trojans have their third round of […]

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The Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches has announced its annual All-Academic Awards list, with 14 USC women’s water polo players picking up top honors for their academic efforts. Leading the powerful group of Women of Troy are four-time honorees Tilly Kearns, Sally McCarthy and Isabel Zimmerman. Four more Trojans have their third round of ACWPC academic accolades in-hand, joined by five with their second such selections and a pair of newcomers to the honor roll.

The ACWPC awards academic honors to student-athletes with 3.2 cumulative GPAs who have dressed at least once in the season.

USC’s 2025 ACWPC All-Academic Awards

Outstanding (4.0-3.71 GPA)

Morgan Netherton*

Isabel Zimmerman^

Superior (3.70-3.41 GPA)

Caitlin Cohen*

Madison Haaland-Ford~

Rachel Gazzaniga~

Maggie Johnson*

Tilly Kearns^

Meghan McAninch~

Sally McCarthy^

Anna Reed

Sinia Plotz*

Excellent (3.40-3.20 GPA)

Hannah Carver~

Emma Lawson~

Alma Yaacobi

^ – four-time honoree

* – three-time honoree

~ – two-time honoree

 



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Croatia Dominates Montenegro to Claim 5th Place at World Championships

The Croatia men’s water polo team secured a convincing 19–13 (3–2, 2–3, 8–2, 6–5) win over Montenegro to finish fifth at the World Championships in Singapore. Ivica Tucak’s squad defeated Montenegro for the second time at this tournament, closing out their campaign with five wins overall. Unfortunately, a single quarterfinal loss to an energetic Hungarian […]

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The Croatia men’s water polo team secured a convincing 19–13 (3–2, 2–3, 8–2, 6–5) win over Montenegro to finish fifth at the World Championships in Singapore.

Ivica Tucak’s squad defeated Montenegro for the second time at this tournament, closing out their campaign with five wins overall. Unfortunately, a single quarterfinal loss to an energetic Hungarian team meant Croatia had to settle for fifth place.

The turning point came in the third quarter. Croatia pulled away with a dominant 8–2 run, including two mini-surges of 3–0 and 5–0.

The first two quarters were tightly contested, with no team taking a real advantage. Montenegro led 6–5 at halftime. But Croatia roared back in the third, scoring three unanswered goals to go up 8–6. Montenegro briefly equalized (8–8), but two goals from Konstantin Kharkov reignited Croatia’s momentum. Luka Bukić, Marko Žuvela, and Loren Fatović capped off a decisive 5–0 run to extend the lead to a game-breaking 13–8.

Žuvela led the charge with five goals, Bukić added four on perfect shooting, and Kharkov chipped in three. Goalkeeper Marko Bijač recorded eight saves. Montenegro’s top scorer was Filip Gardašević with three goals.


 


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