2021
April
01
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 01, 2021
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

As a teacher, one of my least favorite phrases was “those who can’t, teach.” It implies educators must have washed out of the real world.

One of today’s stories puts that adage in a new, almost subversive, light. We meet Justine Siegal, who dreamed as a girl of playing professional baseball. She never got to test that dream because of her gender. Instead, she became the first female coach in Major League Baseball. 

That women are making inroads into men’s professional teams may seem curious. After all, women have their own leagues. But, from youth sports up through the pros, women’s sports are consistently undervalued by society. 

That second-tier status was on display during the NCAA championship, when Ali Kershner, a sports performance coach for Stanford University, posted shots of the weight room for the men’s teams and the single rack of barbells available to the women’s teams. The posts went viral, and the NCAA responded with a fully stocked weight room and an apology. 

I have encountered similar double standards as an assistant amateur boxing coach with USA Boxing. When a fighter I worked with won the New England Golden Gloves, we were told she would need to fundraise to pay both her way and her coaches’ to nationals in Florida. Had she been a male fighter, there would have been travel funding. 

Why does this matter? 

The world of sports is both a reflection and a driver of cultural trends. Seemingly small changes, like Sarah Thomas taking the field to referee the 2021 Super Bowl, send ripples of broader movement across society.

Professional sports is one of the few arenas that holds the attention of people from pretty much all walks of life. And fans love nothing more than watching people shatter the expectations of what is thought to be possible. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Blair Gable/Reuters
The Supreme Court of Canada, shown here in Ottawa on Sept. 17, 2020, is weighing personal dignity against the right to free speech in a case brought by Jérémy Gabriel against comedian Mike Ward.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

A deeper look

COURTESY OF NEW YORK YANKEES
Rachel Balkovec is a hitting coach with a minor league team of the New York Yankees.
Compiled by Connie Foong/Staff; graphics by Karen Norris/Staff

Commentary

Courtesy of Denver Community Fridge
A community fridge, painted in Boulder, Colorado, stands outside Fort Greene, a bar in the Globeville neighborhood of Denver, March 2020. “Mutual aid is communal care,” says Taylor Stack, a member of Denver Community Fridges. “It's a community taking care of one another.”

The Monitor's View

AP
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy talks during a joint media conference with European Council President Charles Michel in Kyiv, Ukraine, March 3.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Mike Blake/Reuters
A family takes a picture at the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile during a visit to The Flower Fields, 50 acres of ranunculus flowers and colorful gardens, in Carlsbad, California, on March 31, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow when our Simon Montlake will explore an experiment in Chelsea, Massachusetts, that puts cash directly in the hands of people in need and how it fits into broader interest in a universal basic income. 

More issues

2021
April
01
Thursday
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