Sign up or login to track your favorite teams on Bleacher Report

Sign Up for Bleacher Report

As a registered user you can subscribe to your favorite teams, post comments, write your own articles, and much more.

You must register in order for that functionality to work!






Validating sign up form ...

Do you want to write for Bleacher Report?

Bleacher Report content is created by fans like you. Do you want to write about your sports, teams, and leagues?

Processing writing preferences ...

Great, , you're signed up! Now select your favorite teams:

i.e. Big 10, LeBron James, USC Football

Selected Tags:

Click here to learn more about writing for Bleacher Report.


Logging in ...

  • Senior Writer
  • Columnist
  • Analyst
  • Scribe
  • Contributor
  • Member

Thaisa Gee

Joined over 2 years ago

  • 2 articles written
  • 6 comments posted

Thaisa's Fans (7)

  • RSS Feed

Thaisa's Bio

What business does a woman have reporting sports?"

How can a woman report on a sport she has never played?

What can a woman tell me about sports that I don t already know?

Questions. Questions that always get shot across the table or bar whenever a man decides he wants to challenge the validity of a
female sports writer or television personality.

The answers to these questions, is never easy to deliver. With all the poise, dignity and knowledge one can muster together, you can only attempt to speak with confidence and not allow the rage in your belly to take over. However, quite often it never ends there. The next stop is usually a round of sports trivia questions, of which you are not allowed to pause or stutter. But let s say ESPN columnist Scoop Jackson walks into a bar, I d guess the male patrons would break their necks to buy him a beer and shoot the breeze for hours about anything from football to hip hop.

Women have always had to prove themselves in male dominated arenas and work twice as hard. And when it comes to sports, it s
as if most men would rather see a female president than see a woman on ESPN. Perhaps we can do both (smile).

For many women involved in sports reporting, their story starts with I was a daddy s girl and eventually I grew my own love for
sports. However, as entertaining and intriguing as most sports are, why can t women just want to be involved in something exciting?

Why can t we thoroughly enjoy a good football game without being motivated by men in tight pants? Why can t we want to see how
many points Kobe Bryant will rack up, without being more impressed with his physical physique?

Welcome to the "Sports Chick's" World!

Thaisa Writes About

  • Thaisa's Play-by-Play

The Short List What Thaisa thinks about sport's most pressing questions

Bulletin Board (7) Post a note »