Current:Home > InvestFlag football gives female players sense of community, scholarship options and soon shot at Olympics -TradeWisdom
Flag football gives female players sense of community, scholarship options and soon shot at Olympics
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:42:40
DENVER (AP) — There were times when Jo Overstreet felt all alone as a standout flag football player on boys teams growing up in Texas.
Sure, she was accepted. Considered just one of the boys.
She longed for something more — a sense of sisterhood.
These days, the 40-year-old receiver for Team USA sees a thriving community of females of all ages and all abilities lifting the sport to new heights. It’s an expansion that will only be enhanced with the sport’s recent addition to the Olympic program for the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles.
The non-contact game featuring plenty of fast-paced action has really been on the rise for a while, with girls-specific teams and leagues springing up from coast to coast — from continent to continent, too. Eight states have sanctioned girls flag football as a high school varsity sport — more are initiating pilot programs — and college scholarships are now offered for female players on the NAIA level. The NFL has even thrown its weight behind flag football through leagues and events.
“This is so big for women to be able to say, ‘I have a dream to play football’ — and to actually know that opportunity is really there,” said Overstreet, a former basketball player at the University of Houston who hopes to be in the mix for a roster spot on the inaugural Olympic roster. “Just saying that to myself now, I’m still in shock.”
Flag football is a sport many may have grown up playing, either through gym class in elementary school or a youth league or perhaps on the playground at recess. It became even more visible last winter, when the NFL turned to flag football as part of its Pro Bowl festivities.
On the international level, the game consists of five players per side on a field that’s 50 yards long — plus 10 yards for each end zone — and 25 yards wide (about half the traditional American football field). The offensive team has four downs to reach midfield for a first down. If they reach midfield, the team has four downs to score.
Even more, every offensive player is an eligible receiver.
The speedy nature has caught on, too.
According to research by USA Football, over a stretch between 2014 and 2022, the participation rate for girls ages 6-12 increased by 178%. There were roughly 112,000 girls in this age range that played the sport in 2021 and 2022.
Like Makayla Martinez, a 14-year-old wide receiver from Phoenix who stood out during the USA Football/Los Angeles Rams’ talent identification camp last summer. She started playing at 5 years old after watching her cousins take the field. She switched to soccer, though, not seeing a route going forward in flag football — until now.
“My dad was like, ‘There’s this girls’ team that’s starting. Do you want to give it a try?’” Martinez recounted. “I was like, ‘No, not really.’ Because I only had played on a boys team. But I gave it a shot. I went for it. I just started focusing on flag football, because I saw that it was growing.”
Currently, Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, and New York offer flag football as a varsity girls sport on the high school level. More states are testing it out, with New Jersey recently moving it from a club sport to one overseen by the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association for the next two spring seasons.
The powerful promotional arm of the NFL is generating growth, too. The league has set up camps, clinics, circuit and even exhibitions.
The Klam family of Austin, Texas, used to be a baseball household, traveling all over to tournaments for their son. Now, Jason and Amberly Klam are fully invested in the world of flag football, even starting their own female travel teams. Their 19-year-old daughter, Ashlea, has long been a star in the sport — since she first stepped onto the field for a boys team at 7 years old. A few years later, Ashlea joined an all-girls squad and they traveled all over.
Instant community
That led them to launch Texas Fury, an all-girls flag football select travel team. At first, they had six girls. These days, the Fury has more than 60 players and seven different teams in various age groups.
Ashlea earned a flag football scholarship to Keiser University in West Palm Beach, Florida, one of nearly two dozen NAIA schools that have programs. Last May, Ottawa University in Kansas cemented its dynasty by winning the program’s third straight NAIA women’s flag football title over Thomas University (Georgia) at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
“My daughter getting an opportunity to go play in college — it’s one of those dreams come true,” Jason Klam said. “And with the sport being added to the Olympics, the future is just tremendous.”
Ashlea Klam was back home in Austin in October — lobbying for Texas high schools to include female flag football as a varsity sport — when she awoke to a text from her parents. A simple screen shot: Flag football was officially in for the 2028 LA Games. Her sport, the one that meant so much that she passed on going to Army to compete in track and field, was gaining inclusion (along with cricket, baseball-softball, lacrosse and squash).
“I had full faith it was going to” make it in, Ashlea Klam said. “We can really show everyone that flag football deserves to be there — and that flag football should be everywhere.”
The U.S. and Mexico already have a robust rivalry on the women’s side. The Americans beat a Mexico team led by star QB Diana Flores during the International Federation of American Football’s Americas Continental Flag Football Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina, over the summer. At the World Games the year before, Flores led her squad to a gold medal.
It’s years away, of course, but it could be quite a gold-medal showdown at the LA Games.
The roster? It’s still a ways away, but beginning next season, there are official USA Football sanctioned events, tournaments and combines to kick off the selection process. It’s anyone’s guess who makes the team as the sport may start luring athletes from other sports (imagine the speed of track stars such as Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone and Sha’Carri Richardson ).
“The announcement (of flag football being in the Olympics) was rocket fuel to an already very fast-paced growth trajectory for the passion of girls and women wanting to play football,” Scott Hallenbeck, the CEO of USA Football, said of a sport that’s an invitational Olympic event for now, but already working ahead to be included on the program for the 2032 Brisbane Games. “It’s been an explosion of participation.”
Receiver Madison Fulford discovered flag football nearly two years ago while playing in an intramural league. In no time, the Limestone University track standout was putting her speed and agility to use for the national team, where she scored four TDs in the gold-medal game versus Mexico last summer.
Fulford balances her time between serving as an Air Force mental health counselor in San Antonio with wearing the red, white and blue for the national team and running flag football skills camps all over the country for young women.
Anything to inspire the next female flag football player.
“I tell them to just have fun,” Fulford said. “Have a fun time bonding with your teammates, your sisters.”
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
veryGood! (2)
Related
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Fox Sports' Charissa Thompson Reacts to Backlash Over Her Comments About Fabricating Sideline Reports
- Shohei Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr. win MLB MVP awards for historic 2023 campaigns
- Amazon shoppers in 2024 will be able to buy a Hyundai directly from the retailer's site
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- 5 charged after brothers found dead of suspected overdose in Alabama, officials say
- Russian authorities ask the Supreme Court to declare the LGBTQ ‘movement’ extremist
- Ex-federation president ruled unfit to hold job in Spanish soccer for 3 years after kissing player
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- 5 charged after brothers found dead of suspected overdose in Alabama, officials say
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Ohio man facing eviction fatally shoots property manager, 2 others before killing himself
- 'That's a first': Drone sightings caused two delays during Bengals-Ravens game
- Bridgerton's Jonathan Bailey Teases Tantalizing Season 3
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Tyler Perry's immeasurable love for his mom: 'When she died, everything in me died'
- Colorado judge keeps Trump on ballot, rejecting challenge under Constitution’s insurrection clause
- Tiger Woods' ex-girlfriend now says she wasn't victim of sexual harassment
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Charissa Thompson saying she made up sideline reports is a bigger problem than you think
Alabama inmate who fatally shot man during 1993 robbery is executed
FAA to investigate drone that delayed Ravens-Bengals game
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Biden seizes a chance to refocus on Asia as wars rage in Europe and the Mideast
New report outlines risks of AI-enabled smart toys on your child's wish list
One of Napoleon’s signature bicorne hats on auction in France could fetch upwards of $650,000