Article written by :: (RSS)

tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves.

This author has written 3287 posts for Hoyden About Town. Read more about tigtog »

10 responses to “Sexualised sports uniforms turning girls off sport”

  1. Paul Tomblin

    Nobody is going to choose looser fitting clothing instead of bike pants, at least in bike racing, after they find themselves losing all the time to people wearing the proper stuff. Tight fitting clothing is often tight for a reason.

  2. Vicki

    Looking at the young women working out in our university fitness center, it seems that loose t-shirts (not huge, just not tight) and comfortable shorts are what they like. I don’t see teeny little midriff shirts or panty-like shorts.

  3. Paul Tomblin

    Viv, both the men and the women in your track and field examples before were wearing tight clothes. Since “tight” is the first word in the quoted text above, I have to think that tightness is seen as a problem, and that whether it’s track and field or any number of any other sports, *allowing* girls to wear loose fitting clothing isn’t going to help anything unless you *force* all of them to do the same. Otherwise, girls won’t quit sports because of body image issues, but instead will quit because they’re unable to compete against the ones wearing more sports-appropriate tight clothing.

    So where do you draw the line? Gym slips, or burkas?

  4. worldpeace_and_aspeedboat

    that’s the sort of point I’d like to make too, tig – what’s the point in getting a 13-14 yr old girl to wear something they find embarrassing? they won’t take the sport up in the first place, let alone become good enough at it to then look at the advantages/disadvantages of what she’s wearing.

    that shot of the beach volleyball girl – crikey. an average girl at school would probably rather sink into the ground than to have her bum crack showing. a middle-ages woman is just going to say, no, I’d rather go and have a coffee and cake, thanks. hell, I hated wearing those pleated gym skirts and scungys in high school. why couldn’t we have worn shorts? any length we desired?

    (this is slightly off-topic, but back in the 70′s my mum fought the P&C furiously to allow girls to wear trousers in winter instead of those foul box-pleat uniforms. why did we have to put up with draughty, cold legs when boys got to wear slacks? things like this get me just as cranky)

    let ‘em wear what they want, and be as serious as they want.

  5. TamerTerra

    Word. I remember watching the lads during gymnastics training when I was about 13 – they’d tend to wear tight shorts that came down to their knees, with baggy, shorter shorts on top. We had to wear leotards, with lycra shorts if we wanted. I just remember thinking that I’d like to line up to use some of the equiptment, but someone might stand *behind* me, and what if they could see the lines where my leotard (or worse, pants!) was under my shorts!

  6. Sprinter

    What i rather wear tight uniforms than loose, i run track and ill feel more comfortable in tight clothes then loose, the loose ones slow you down, and then its tighter it makes you feel as if the uniform is part of your body its not extra weaight on you.

The commenting period has expired for this post. If you wish to re-open the discussion, please do so in the latest Open Thread.