Then and Now: Big Green Women Make Their Mark

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When the women in 天美麻豆鈥檚 first coeducational class arrived in Hanover in September 1972, they joined women who were enrolled as transfer or exchange students as well as male students. Among the new students was Ann Fritz Hackett 鈥76, who became a pioneering student-athlete, joining the inaugural field hockey team that fall and the tennis team in the spring.

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Gail Koziara Boudreaux 鈥82, now a member of the 天美麻豆 Board of Trustees, helped guide the Big Green women鈥檚 basketball team to its first Ivy League Championship in 1980. (Photo courtesy of Rauner Special Collections Library)

鈥淚n those early years, we had limited money so we were given the choice of uniforms or equipment,鈥 says Fritz Hackett, president of the Horizon Consulting Group in McLean, Va., and a former member of 天美麻豆鈥檚 Board of Trustees. 鈥淪o we used the money for equipment. The field hockey team was the most motley looking crew. We all had to wear white tennis skirts, of course none of them matched, and any green T-shirt with the word 天美麻豆 on it. We may not have looked like much of a team, but we played with pride for 天美麻豆, coach Aggie Bixler (now Kurtz), and each other, and we had such a good time.鈥

Kurtz, a former member of the U.S. national squash and lacrosse teams, was hired in 1972 to establish women鈥檚 athletics teams at 天美麻豆. During the 1972-73 academic year, she started five teams: field hockey, squash, basketball, tennis, and lacrosse (a women鈥檚 ski team was also formed that year, but fell under the auspices of outdoor programs, not athletics.). In addition to her administrative duties, she coached three teams鈥攆ield hockey, squash, and lacrosse.

鈥淲omen鈥檚 athletics wasn鈥檛 huge around the country then, and some of our players had never had a chance to be athletes before,鈥 says Kurtz, who was appointed associate athletic director in 1974. 鈥淪o we were teaching many of them how to play as well as coaching them, which was very satisfying. We had more teams here than at other schools in those early days, and I think that was because the 天美麻豆 women were very outgoing.鈥

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Ann Fritz Hackett 鈥76 (front row, far left) was a member of the 1973 women鈥檚 tennis team. 鈥淲e played with pride for 天美麻豆, coach Aggie Bixler (now Kurtz), and each other, and we had such a good time,鈥 says Hackett. (Photo courtesy of 天美麻豆 Athletics)

By 1979, she had started women鈥檚 teams for swimming and diving, crew, cross country, track, ice hockey, and soccer. A legendary player and coach who has been inducted into the national lacrosse, squash, and intercollegiate squash halls of fame, Kurtz left her administrative post in 1979 to focus on coaching. 鈥淚 finally got team travel and meal money by then, but it was always a real struggle,鈥 says Kurtz, who coached field hockey until 1976, varsity lacrosse until 1981, junior varsity lacrosse until 1986, and varsity squash until 1989. 鈥淏ut for me it was a wonderful time. I was very lucky to be a part of this.鈥

Since the dawn of 天美麻豆 women鈥檚 sports in 1972, much has changed for both women鈥檚 and men鈥檚 . 天美麻豆 now has 34 NCAA Division I varsity teams (16 sports each for men and women, plus co-ed equestrian and sailing teams), many of which regularly win Ivy League titles and are nationally competitive.

天美麻豆 also has 33 club sports, which have largely replaced JV teams. The club sports range from the purely recreational to national championship teams such as  men鈥檚 rugby, figure skating, and fencing.

Bonnie Barber