Women in football, politics and credit union boardrooms

It’s important to prioritize and value diversity.

It’s Super Bowl Sunday as I write this, and it’s snowing at my home in New Hampshire. My husband has made a big batch of his famous mac and cheese, and we have a fire roaring in our wood stove in the ell. (Unless you’re from New England, you won’t know what an ell is, but it’s a great term that means the room that connects the house to your barn. For us, that room has been refinished to a cozy family room.)

We’re getting ready to watch Tom Brady (yes, I’m still rooting for him) take on Patrick Mahomes. But the news that I’ve been focused on this week is about the three women who “will be making history” tonight—National Football League referee Sarah Thomas and Tampa Bay Buccaneer assistant coaches Maral Javadifar and Lori Locus. While Tom Brady will be playing in a record 10th Super Bowl, for the first time in NFL history, three women will also be on the field tonight.

While the female football ref and coaches made news all week, I also saw an interview with Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson and Monique Lamoureux-Morando, two sisters who happen to be Olympic gold medalists in hockey. Aside from continuing to play the sport that they love, they’ve also dedicated their lives to inspiring the next generation of young girls to fight for equality in sports. Asked about tonight’s history-making Super Bowl, one of them said, and I’m paraphrasing here, “We’ll know we’ve made progress when this is no longer a story.” I couldn’t agree more.

 

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