Did you know that girls participate in sports at lower rates than boys at all ages? And that girls get involved in sports later than boys and drop out earlier—a sad trend that crests around adolescence? On the flip side, according to research by the Women’s Sports Foundation (an advocacy group founded by Billie Jean King in 1974), “Youth sports participation is linked to substantial physical, social-emotional and achievement-related benefits. For girls in particular, research consistently demonstrates sports participation is linked to their improved physical and mental health; academic achievement; and increased levels of body esteem, confidence and mastery, with some indication that girls reap greater benefits from sports participation than do boys.”
Star athletes aren’t just born. They are raised. Here, seven stat-supported reasons to cheer on your own.
1. Sports Are The Loneliness Antidote
2. Sports Teach You To Fail
3. Playing Promotes Healthy Competition
When asked what they liked most about sports, three-quarters of the girls surveyed by the WSF said “competition.” Per the researchers, “Competitiveness, including liking to win, competing against other teams/individuals, and even friendly competition among teammates, was one of the primary reasons girls provided for why sports are ‘fun.’” If we want more women kicking butt in the boardroom, we should get them used to doing it on the playing field. The WSF researchers note that if women didn’t play sports as kids, “they haven’t had as much experience with the trial-and-error method of learning new skills and positions, and are less likely to be as confident as their male counterparts about trying something new.” As research published in JAMA Pediatrics shows us, the kids who are the most healthy, motivated and successful in life are the ones who have a growth mindset—meaning they believe things like academic achievement and athletic ability are not fixed traits but acquired skills, attainable through hard work and perseverance. Sports show kids that talent can be honed and developed—in the classroom and on the court.
According to the WSF, 80 percent of female executives at Fortune 500 companies reported playing sports as children.
4. Playing Sports Boosts Mental Health
5. The Physical Health Benefits Are Huge
6. Female Athletes Are More Likely To Be Academic All-stars
High school girls who play sports are more likely to get better grades in school and are more likely to graduate than girls who do not play sports, per the WSF. The researchers behind “The Girls’ Index” back this up. They discovered that “girls who play sports have higher GPAs and have higher opinions of their abilities and competencies. Sixty-one percent of high school girls who have a grade point average above 4.0 play on a sports team. Additionally, girls who are involved in sports are 14 percent more likely to believe they are smart enough for their dream career and 13 percent more likely to be considering a career in math and/or science.”