Tara VanDerveer: Well, growing up, I didn’t have the opportunity to play organized sports. I always loved sports, I always loved basketball, but our family, you know, Friday night was going to the Y, jumping on the trampoline, swimming. We skied, ice skated, we did everything, and I played with the boys all the time when I was little. But not having a team to play on, not having a uniform to wear, was really painful for me. It was before Title IX, and it was something that I really feel like I missed out on. So, in some ways, as a coach, I lived through the students that I coach in terms of, you know, really enjoying the practice, enjoying playing on a team, the camaraderie, and helping young women develop skills of discipline, of teamwork—things that you get to do through sports. But, you know, it might be just a different learning process than an academic learning. And having to work with people, getting to know people, playing with people of different backgrounds, and all of that—I missed out on, and it was really hard for me. But I think that now, through the process of Title IX, young girls have this opportunity, and they’re benefiting from it.