Gender play gap: Girls lag far behind in sport participation
But Girls Sport Victoria, a coalition of 23 private girls' schools, has set itself the challenge of not only stopping the gender play gap but extending female participation beyond the school gates.
The most recent data from the Sport Participation in Victoria Survey, released last month, found that 21.8 per cent of 15-19-year-old girls participated in community sport, compared with 41.4 per cent of boys.
The gender discrepancy was evident among five to nine-year-olds as well, with just 47.5 per cent of girls playing sport compared with 68.6 per cent of boys.
And while almost half (47.5 per cent) of girls aged five to nine participated in community sport in 2023, just 21.8 per cent of 15-19-year-old girls remained involved in sport.
'That's always where we have seen a big drop-off in sport,' said Federation University professor of sport science Professor Rochelle Eime.
'A lot of girls don't necessarily like the competitive nature of sport, and sport can get very serious around 15 to 19, but the majority of girls at that age just want to play with their friendship groups.'
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Genazzano FCJ College principal Loretta Wholley, who became president of Girls Sport Victoria this week, will focus her efforts on keeping those aged 15 to 18 involved in sport, as well as creating pathways for students into sports at an elite level by working with organisations such as the Australian Women's Golf Network.
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The Age
20-07-2025
- The Age
Fallout from Schultz concussion reverberated through the AFL. He remembers the aftermath for a different reason
'So I think that just shows how great footy can really be.' Schultz says he does not remember leaving the field, but has a clear recollection from the time he reached the interchange bench. 'I think it looked a lot worse than what it was. Obviously, I was out pretty quickly, but once I got back into the rooms and I sat down, I was able to recompose a little bit and I felt way better. 'It was just like a normal concussion. You are a bit groggy for a few days after it, but you come back to terms pretty quickly.' Loading Schultz did not delve into the public spat that followed, largely involving the umpire fraternity and then head of football Laura Kane, because he prefers to stay disconnected from outside noise. 'I was the person that was involved in it, but I had nothing to do with it,' he says of the debate that followed. 'Everyone's just trying to do their job and do it to the best of their ability and that goes for umpires as well.' As Schultz, 27, continues to make his mark at Collingwood this year, after a tough opening season in the black and white, he has also found reason to celebrate off the field. He and childhood sweetheart Maddie Oberin, who he first met at Moama Grammar, became engaged during Collingwood's June bye weekend on a trip to Hamilton Island. After sneaking the ring onto their Queensland flight in his carry-on luggage, Schultz then hired a boat at the island and set sail for a deserted beach with a picnic basket and a bottle of champagne before popping the question. 'I sort of just winged it,' he said. 'I reckon she had an inkling. She would never say that she knew it was coming, but I reckon she knew. She was very happy, thank God, but the pressure was on [to propose].' Schultz and Oberin rekindled their high school romance about the time he joined Fremantle at the end of 2018. She was also central to his decision five years later to request a move home so they could be closer to their families in Echuca and Moama. News of his trade to Collingwood in exchange for pick 34 and a future first-rounder did not filter through straight away. The pair were on safari in Tanzania. 'It was pretty weird actually because over there you've got no service when you're out on safari,' he says. 'You've got no idea what's going on in the world, and then you get back to the safari lodges and hit Wi-Fi and your phone blows up. That's pretty much how I found out.' It was a familiar off-the-grid theme when Schultz was taken at pick 57 by the Dockers as a 20-year-old in the 2018 national draft. He had played TAC Cup for Bendigo Pioneers, was named best-on-ground as a 17-year-old for Moama in a losing Murray League grand final before joining Williamstown for three years in the VFL. 'I was a plumber for five years before I got drafted. I left school at 15,' he says. 'I knew the draft was on, and I was hopeful that I was going to get picked up, but I still had to get to work. I was working in the basement of a house in Camberwell and I had no reception, so I'm going in and out of the basement to let my phone catch up to what was going on. 'I walked out of the basement and my phone just started ringing, and it was [then Dockers coach] Ross Lyon and my boss calling me and saying, 'Mate, you've just been picked up, get off the job site'.' Schultz's return to Melbourne did not go as smoothly as he had hoped. Collingwood suffered a premiership hangover and the small forward suffered a dip in form. The criticism followed. 'I copped it from all angles,' Schultz says as he reveals he switched off public comments on his social media channels to hold out the negativity. 'I was a little bit naive coming into the club. I just thought, coming out of Freo where I had put together a couple of decent seasons and going into a club that's just won a flag, I probably assumed a little bit too much.' The frustration reached boiling point last year during Collingwood's round eight clash against Carlton when their new recruit lashed out at 'one of my best mates' Blake Acres and copped a one-match ban. It led him to coach Craig McRae's door for a heart-to-heart about the destructive nature of his expectations. 'I was too caught up in looking at the bigger picture,' he says. 'I was worried about having a good season rather than having a good moment in a game, or I was worried about trying to put together a good month rather than just trying to focus on the next game.' Schultz said McRae helped him to put a stake in the ground, and he finished the season as Collingwood's defensive player of the year. 'I feel like this year I have really found my straps and obviously, it's been frustrating with being injured for the majority of it, but I'm still just loving being there,' he says. 'I love the club, I love the culture, and it's just a great place to go to every day. You wake up pretty happy that's for sure.'

The Age
19-07-2025
- The Age
Which has more pressure: playing for the Pies, or smuggling a diamond ring onto a plane?
'So I think that just shows how great footy can really be.' Schultz says he does not remember leaving the field, but has a clear recollection from the time he reached the interchange bench. 'I think it looked a lot worse than what it was. Obviously, I was out pretty quickly, but once I got back into the rooms and I sat down, I was able to recompose a little bit and I felt way better. 'It was just like a normal concussion. You are a bit groggy for a few days after it, but you come back to terms pretty quickly.' Loading Schultz did not delve into the public spat that followed, largely involving the umpire fraternity and then head of football Laura Kane, because he prefers to stay disconnected from outside noise. 'I was the person that was involved in it, but I had nothing to do with it,' he says of the debate that followed. 'Everyone's just trying to do their job and do it to the best of their ability and that goes for umpires as well.' As Schultz, 27, continues to make his mark at Collingwood this year, after a tough opening season in the black and white, he has also found reason to celebrate off the field. He and childhood sweetheart Maddie Oberin, who he first met at Moama Grammar, became engaged during Collingwood's June bye weekend on a trip to Hamilton Island. After sneaking the ring onto their Queensland flight in his carry-on luggage, Schultz then hired a boat at the island and set sail for a deserted beach with a picnic basket and a bottle of champagne before popping the question. 'I sort of just winged it,' he said. 'I reckon she had an inkling. She would never say that she knew it was coming, but I reckon she knew. She was very happy, thank God, but the pressure was on [to propose].' Schultz and Oberin rekindled their high school romance about the time he joined Fremantle at the end of 2018. She was also central to his decision five years later to request a move home so they could be closer to their families in Echuca and Moama. News of his trade to Collingwood in exchange for pick 34 and a future first-rounder did not filter through straight away. The pair were on safari in Tanzania. 'It was pretty weird actually because over there you've got no service when you're out on safari,' he says. 'You've got no idea what's going on in the world, and then you get back to the safari lodges and hit Wi-Fi and your phone blows up. That's pretty much how I found out.' It was a familiar off-the-grid theme when Schultz was taken at pick 57 by the Dockers as a 20-year-old in the 2018 national draft. He had played TAC Cup for Bendigo Pioneers, was named best-on-ground as a 17-year-old for Moama in a losing Murray League grand final before joining Williamstown for three years in the VFL. 'I was a plumber for five years before I got drafted. I left school at 15,' he says. 'I knew the draft was on, and I was hopeful that I was going to get picked up, but I still had to get to work. I was working in the basement of a house in Camberwell and I had no reception, so I'm going in and out of the basement to let my phone catch up to what was going on. 'I walked out of the basement and my phone just started ringing, and it was [then Dockers coach] Ross Lyon and my boss calling me and saying, 'Mate, you've just been picked up, get off the job site'.' Schultz's return to Melbourne did not go as smoothly as he had hoped. Collingwood suffered a premiership hangover and the small forward suffered a dip in form. The criticism followed. 'I copped it from all angles,' Schultz says as he reveals he switched off public comments on his social media channels to hold out the negativity. 'I was a little bit naive coming into the club. I just thought, coming out of Freo where I had put together a couple of decent seasons and going into a club that's just won a flag, I probably assumed a little bit too much.' The frustration reached boiling point last year during Collingwood's round eight clash against Carlton when their new recruit lashed out at 'one of my best mates' Blake Acres and copped a one-match ban. It led him to coach Craig McRae's door for a heart-to-heart about the destructive nature of his expectations. 'I was too caught up in looking at the bigger picture,' he says. 'I was worried about having a good season rather than having a good moment in a game, or I was worried about trying to put together a good month rather than just trying to focus on the next game.' Schultz said McRae helped him to put a stake in the ground, and he finished the season as Collingwood's defensive player of the year. 'I feel like this year I have really found my straps and obviously, it's been frustrating with being injured for the majority of it, but I'm still just loving being there,' he says. 'I love the club, I love the culture, and it's just a great place to go to every day. You wake up pretty happy that's for sure.'

Sydney Morning Herald
19-07-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
Which has more pressure: playing for the Pies, or smuggling a diamond ring onto a plane?
'So I think that just shows how great footy can really be.' Schultz says he does not remember leaving the field, but has a clear recollection from the time he reached the interchange bench. 'I think it looked a lot worse than what it was. Obviously, I was out pretty quickly, but once I got back into the rooms and I sat down, I was able to recompose a little bit and I felt way better. 'It was just like a normal concussion. You are a bit groggy for a few days after it, but you come back to terms pretty quickly.' Loading Schultz did not delve into the public spat that followed, largely involving the umpire fraternity and then head of football Laura Kane, because he prefers to stay disconnected from outside noise. 'I was the person that was involved in it, but I had nothing to do with it,' he says of the debate that followed. 'Everyone's just trying to do their job and do it to the best of their ability and that goes for umpires as well.' As Schultz, 27, continues to make his mark at Collingwood this year, after a tough opening season in the black and white, he has also found reason to celebrate off the field. He and childhood sweetheart Maddie Oberin, who he first met at Moama Grammar, became engaged during Collingwood's June bye weekend on a trip to Hamilton Island. After sneaking the ring onto their Queensland flight in his carry-on luggage, Schultz then hired a boat at the island and set sail for a deserted beach with a picnic basket and a bottle of champagne before popping the question. 'I sort of just winged it,' he said. 'I reckon she had an inkling. She would never say that she knew it was coming, but I reckon she knew. She was very happy, thank God, but the pressure was on [to propose].' Schultz and Oberin rekindled their high school romance about the time he joined Fremantle at the end of 2018. She was also central to his decision five years later to request a move home so they could be closer to their families in Echuca and Moama. News of his trade to Collingwood in exchange for pick 34 and a future first-rounder did not filter through straight away. The pair were on safari in Tanzania. 'It was pretty weird actually because over there you've got no service when you're out on safari,' he says. 'You've got no idea what's going on in the world, and then you get back to the safari lodges and hit Wi-Fi and your phone blows up. That's pretty much how I found out.' It was a familiar off-the-grid theme when Schultz was taken at pick 57 by the Dockers as a 20-year-old in the 2018 national draft. He had played TAC Cup for Bendigo Pioneers, was named best-on-ground as a 17-year-old for Moama in a losing Murray League grand final before joining Williamstown for three years in the VFL. 'I was a plumber for five years before I got drafted. I left school at 15,' he says. 'I knew the draft was on, and I was hopeful that I was going to get picked up, but I still had to get to work. I was working in the basement of a house in Camberwell and I had no reception, so I'm going in and out of the basement to let my phone catch up to what was going on. 'I walked out of the basement and my phone just started ringing, and it was [then Dockers coach] Ross Lyon and my boss calling me and saying, 'Mate, you've just been picked up, get off the job site'.' Schultz's return to Melbourne did not go as smoothly as he had hoped. Collingwood suffered a premiership hangover and the small forward suffered a dip in form. The criticism followed. 'I copped it from all angles,' Schultz says as he reveals he switched off public comments on his social media channels to hold out the negativity. 'I was a little bit naive coming into the club. I just thought, coming out of Freo where I had put together a couple of decent seasons and going into a club that's just won a flag, I probably assumed a little bit too much.' The frustration reached boiling point last year during Collingwood's round eight clash against Carlton when their new recruit lashed out at 'one of my best mates' Blake Acres and copped a one-match ban. It led him to coach Craig McRae's door for a heart-to-heart about the destructive nature of his expectations. 'I was too caught up in looking at the bigger picture,' he says. 'I was worried about having a good season rather than having a good moment in a game, or I was worried about trying to put together a good month rather than just trying to focus on the next game.' Schultz said McRae helped him to put a stake in the ground, and he finished the season as Collingwood's defensive player of the year. 'I feel like this year I have really found my straps and obviously, it's been frustrating with being injured for the majority of it, but I'm still just loving being there,' he says. 'I love the club, I love the culture, and it's just a great place to go to every day. You wake up pretty happy that's for sure.'