Boy Scores Both Goals As Somerset Berkley Girls’ Field Hockey Wins State Championship Game

Printed from: https://newbostonpost.com/2024/11/16/somerset-berkley-field-hockey-boy-state-championship/

A boy scored both goals for the winning team in a Massachusetts girls’ field hockey state championship game this weekend.

Sophomore Ryan Crook, a boy who also plays varsity baseball, netted two goals for Somerset Berkley as the team beat Norwood 2-1 in the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association Division 2 state championship game on Saturday, November 16.

Crook was a key contributor to the team this season in other games as well. Here are some examples, according to game recaps:

 

 

Crook even delivered his team two wins this season as the Dighton-Rehoboth girls’ field hockey team forfeited both of its games against Somerset Berkley this year. Dighton-Rehoboth cited a school district policy that lets the school’s teams and athletes opt out of athletic competition against members of the opposite sex, as NewBostonPost previously reported. Dighton-Rehoboth enacted the policy after a girl suffered serious injuries last fall; the injury came after she was hit in the face by a ball shot by an opposing male player on Swampscott, as NewBostonPost previously reported.

Crook and his family are heavily involved with Somerset Berkley field hockey. His mother, Jen Crook, is the team’s head coach. His older brother and sister also shined for the team when they were in high school.

His older sister Cami, a 2021 Somerset Berkley graduate, plays women’s college field hockey at Providence College, which is an NCAA Division 1 school.

Additionally, his older brother Lucas, who graduated in 2020, was a field hockey star. Lucas is the leading scorer in school history (142 goals and 122 assists).

Cami and Lucas helped Somerset Berkley win back-to-back Division 1 state championships in 2018 and 2019; Lucas netted the game-winning goal in overtime in his team’s 2-1 state championship victory over Nashoba in 2018. As a senior, Lucas was named as the South Coast Conference’s most valuable player — and to The Boston Globe All-Scholastic team.

Massachusetts is the lone state where boys can play field hockey with girls; they do so every year and make significant impacts on their respective teams.

The state lets boys play girls’ sports play due to the 1979 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision in Attorney General v. Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association. The court determined that the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association’s policy of the time which stated “No boy may play on a girls’ team” was unlawful. The court’s view was it violated the Equal Rights Amendment of the Massachusetts Constitution.

Here is what the Equal Rights Amendment of the Massachusetts Constitution says:

 

All people are born free and equal and have certain natural, essential and unalienable rights; among which may be reckoned the right of enjoying and defending their lives and liberties; that of acquiring, possessing and protecting property; in fine, that of seeking and obtaining their safety and happiness. Equality under the law shall not be denied or abridged because of sex, race, color, creed or national origin.

 

The Equal Rights Amendment was somewhat new at the time of that decision. It passed via referendum in the November 1976 general election; 60.4 percent of voters supported it, while 39.6 percent opposed it, according to the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s office. Every county in the Bay State voted in favor of the proposed amendment.

Statewide, in the fall 2022 season (the most recent data available), 216 Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association member schools had field hockey; 66 boys played for those teams, according to participation survey data from the MIAA.

Somerset Berkley head coach Jen Crook could not be immediately reached for comment on Saturday.

 

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