For the first time, a woman will don the black and white striped uniform for the National Football League as a full-time game official. Meet Sarah Thomas.
For the first time in the National Football League's 95-year history, a woman will don the black and white striped uniform as a full-time game official.
Sarah Thomas said she was "speechless" when Dean Biandino, the NFL Vice-President of Officiating, hired her last week. Although honored to be considered a trail blazer for women, she just wants to blend in with the other six referees on field and never make a mistake.
Plucked as a top candidate from the NFL's advanced development program for officials, the Brandon, Mississippi native has more than 20 years under her belt. She already broke ground as the first woman ever to officiate in a prestigious college bowl game.
Thomas is not the first female to ever take the field. Shannon Eastin filled in during a 2012 labor dispute between the league and staff officials, but wasn't officially hired on staff.
All eyes may be on Thomas when the season kicks off in September, but she doesn't want any special attention. "The guys don't think of me as a female, they see me as just another official," she says.
"It's meaningful to a lot of people, and I'm honored for that. But that's not why I set out to do this, to break a gender barrier of any sort. I just did it because I loved officiating," she said Thursday on Today. "I'm not nervous, really…I'm just making sure that my fellow crew mates know I'm ready, and that the coaches and players know I'm there to do a job as an official."
The Class 3A state high school wrestling championship this week in St. Paul, Minnesota ended with a standing ovation and some tears for the class act athlete who lost in the finals. The cheers started for the high school sophomore who wanted to win the state for his father, who is battling terminal cancer. But, the tears came after Malik Stewart, who lost the match, went over to hug his opponent's father.
A junior at West Liberty Salem High School in Ohio brought won a state championship medal in the 1600 meter race, but is being praised for her performance in the race she lost. Meghan Vogel was running around the final turn of the 3200-meter event when she saw a competitor fall in front of her. What happened next offered the crowd gathered for the Ohio Division III girls championship an inspiring glimpse into the heart of true sportsmanship.
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