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Success Is Cut Short : Girls’ Team Is Disqualified After Race Because Runners’ Uniform Was Risque

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From Associated Press

A girls’ cross-country team was disqualified from a third-place finish because a referee and a group that regulates high school sports ruled the girls’ running shorts were too risque.

“We were so happy after we crossed the finish line, then when they told us we were disqualified we started crying,” said Lissette Perez, a sophomore at Miami Gulliver Prep School.

The team placed third in a two-mile race at a state meet Nov. 18 in Jacksonville.

Lissette’s father, Luis Perez, called The Miami Herald on Thursday to protest. The Herald published the story Sunday.

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The Florida High School Activities Assn. permits girls to wear briefs for competition, but requires that they not be “abbreviated,” meaning high-cut.

A deputy commissioner with the association, Ron Allen, and a referee for the meet, Jim Donovan, ruled that the briefs were high-cut.

Many female runners prefer the tight briefs to regular running shorts, which flap and bunch up. The Gulliver team wears briefs similar to those worn by American Olympic stars Jackie Joyner-Kersee and Gail Devers.

The Gulliver coach, Karen Calloway, said she ordered the briefs from an athletic apparel manufacturer and that the girls have worn them all season with no complaints.

The Herald reported that on the day of the meet, Allen asked a spectator if he would allow his daughter to wear such things.

“As a matter of fact, she’s wearing them right now,” replied Luis Perez.

Perez said Allen then asked him, “What if they were white? Their private parts might show.” Perez said: “I asked him if he was there to watch the race or to watch private parts.”

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