A $3.5-million gift to Â鶹Çø aims to level playing field for female athletes
Â鶹Çø alumni and long-time Athletics benefactorsÌýSheryl KerrÌý(BCom'67) andÌýDavid KerrÌý(BSc'65) are chalking up another important "assist" for Team Â鶹Çø with a $3.5-million gift to create the Kerr Family Women in Sport program. This "WIS" initiative aims to advance the role of women as athletes, coaches and decision-makers by increasing the number of full-time female coaches and helping female athletes become future leaders.
The transformative gift positions Â鶹Çø as uniquely situated among Canadian universities in offering a full range of support programs to its female student-athletes and coaches.
"WeÌýextendÌýourÌýsincere thanks to Sheryl and David Kerr for their longstanding support of Â鶹Çø's athletics program and for championing the cause of women in sport in such a meaningful manner,"ÌýsaidÌýSuzanne Fortier, Â鶹Çø's principal and vice-chancellor. Ìý"This is an important milestone for our University and continues Â鶹Çø's tradition of leading change in women's athletics."
As a first step, Â鶹Çø Athletics and Recreation announced today that it has appointedÌýSylvie Béliveau, a former national team coach and women's sports advocate, as senior advisor to Â鶹Çø's varsity program and as a key steward of the WIS initiative.
Béliveau, an honoured member of Canada Soccer's Hall of Fame, guided the Canadian national women's soccer program from 1986 to 1995. She is past president of Égale Action, a Quebec-based organization dedicated to the participation and advancement of girls and women in sport and physical activity.
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"This is a ground-breaking initiative that has the potential to impact young girls and women across the country," she said.
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The WIS program will make an immediate impact at Â鶹Çø. A 2013 report by U SPORTS, the national governing body for intercollegiate sport, listed only 17 per cent of head coaching and 22 per cent of assistant coaching positions as being occupied by women. With the increased presence of female leadership in Â鶹Çø's sporting culture, the University hopes to be a catalyst for similar change within the Canadian collegiate landscape.
In addition to Béliveau's arrival, Â鶹Çø has also appointed, through the WIS initiative, two new full-time assistant coaches,ÌýKelsey Wilson, with the soccer Martlets, andÌýRikki Bowles, who has joined the basketball Martlets. An additional full-time assistant coach, for women's volleyball, is forthcoming.
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The WIS program will also have an immediate effect on the quality of female student-athletes' experience, by offering additional resources and support during their playing years and beyond.
"At Â鶹Çø, where student-athletes combine an outstanding academic education with top-level sport, we have a unique opportunity to build a program that will allow our female coaches and athletes to thrive," saidÌýMarc Gélinas, executive director of Â鶹Çø Athletics and Recreation. "And thanks to the generosity and vision of the Kerr family, our student-athletes will become stronger, more confident leaders, ready to enrich Canada's sports, as well as our professions, culture and society."
The Kerr family has a long history and deep connections with Â鶹Çø's athletics program. Both played varsity hockey for Â鶹Çø during their student years, and they met when David coached the women's team, where Sheryl was playing for the Martlets, in the 1963-64 season. The couple married in 1969, and today make their home in Toronto.
"Â鶹Çø was an important part of our past and hockey was a really great part of that experience," saidÌýDavid Kerr.
In 2007, the Kerrs established theÌýKerr Martlet Hockey Coach Endowment, which created a permanent source of funding for a full-time coach for the women's team. The impact was remarkable, fuelling the Martlets to incredible success in recruiting and developing top players, as well as capturing four national championships – the most of any U SPORTS program in Â鶹Çø history.
"We felt that it was important to provide female athletes at Â鶹Çø with additional opportunities and support networks and to give something back to the program that did so much for us," addedÌýSheryl Kerr.