From the commonly misconstrued to the outright false, US Lacrosse Magazine goes “Myth Busters” mode in its September/October edition. Don’t get the mag? Join US Lacrosse today to start your subscription.
At the intersection of sports, natural abilities and gender, myths and assumptions abound. Some beliefs are spoken, and some tenets are just implicit in our culture. Many female athletes will tell you that male athletes are perceived as stronger, faster and, thus, better athletes. Cue John McEnroe’s recent comments on Serena Williams being a great athlete, yet he quipped, she would only rank 700th if she competed against men. His diatribe sparked outrage and debate ensued. One commentator noted that McEnroe was comparing apples to oranges.
Was he? If we say separate but equal, are we unfairly stereotyping athletes or are we accepting innate gender differences and different pathways to athletic excellence and participation?
Dr. Christine Brooks, a coaching educator for USA Track and Field, offers a course, “The Science of Training Young Athletes,” in which she works through several studies looking at the various biological systems that define athletic performance. Her sources show that in the pre-puberty stages, boys are not stronger than girls. Specifically, she cites studies on lower body and core strength in which girls outperformed boys or maintained equal results at a minimum.
Similarly, in another study of adolescent swimmers, reviewing more than 1.9 million swims, the authors found little or no difference in performance based on gender in swimmers 12 and under.
While these studies demonstrate comparable physical attributes and strength based performance in the youngest ages, they do see a shift around age 13, such that by age 15, boys are around 12 percent stronger than girls in their lower body and 23 percent stronger in their upper body. Research indicates that by age 17, boys are 50 percent stronger than girls in lower body strength.
Brooks, among others, cautions that the widening gap in strength after puberty may reflect not only inherent capacities, but also differences in training opportunities.