Description

Book Synopsis

Prior to the 1972 passage of Title IX, women’s basketball was a minor sport in the United States. It was played by companies such as Cook’s Goldblume Beer and Sunoco and for obscure colleges such as Iowa Wesleyan and Wayland Baptist as part of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). But during the two generations of the mid-twentieth century, women’s basketball improved and became more popular throughout the country. AAU All-Star teams dominated women’s international basketball until the emergence of subsidized national teams in the 1960s.

The women who played on these AAU teams helped to lay the foundation for women’s athletics today. Most of the teams came from central and southern states, and most of the players had rural origins. “Country girls” from Arkansas, Iowa, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas competed at an elite level unknown to their city sisters. The AAU formed several successful international teams of gifted players that gained fame abroad but that were anonymous at home. Until nearly the last quarter of the century, skilled women basketball players had only one option after high school: the AAU.

This is the history of these gifted women, their coaches, and their teams—their records, motivations, and personal stories. Extensively illustrated, Just for Fun is the first book to thoroughly explore the complex history of the Amateur Athletic Union’s women’s basketball program and to bring to light the four decades of women’s basketball all but forgotten in the current success of women’s athletics.



Trade Review
Ikard (a basketball aficionado and amateur historian) offers a meticulous history of women's basketball in the US - from the first game played at Smith College in 1892 to the 1970s - but he focuses on the AAU in the first half of the 20th century.... This period of women's basketball is rarely discussed, so Ikard's book will be valuable to sports historians.... Highly recommended." - Choice

"Exceptional chronicle of a sorely overlooked period in American sports." - Ron Wynn, Nashville City Paper

"Well documented for a history aimed at the general reader, Ikard's work is likely to become a launching point for a renewed look into a corner of women's and sports history overlooked by researchers." - Bill Smith, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Just for Fun: The Story of AAU Women's Basketball

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 6 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Robert Ikard

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      Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
      Publication Date: 30/07/2008
      ISBN13: 9781557288899, 978-1557288899
      ISBN10: 1557288895

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Prior to the 1972 passage of Title IX, women’s basketball was a minor sport in the United States. It was played by companies such as Cook’s Goldblume Beer and Sunoco and for obscure colleges such as Iowa Wesleyan and Wayland Baptist as part of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). But during the two generations of the mid-twentieth century, women’s basketball improved and became more popular throughout the country. AAU All-Star teams dominated women’s international basketball until the emergence of subsidized national teams in the 1960s.

      The women who played on these AAU teams helped to lay the foundation for women’s athletics today. Most of the teams came from central and southern states, and most of the players had rural origins. “Country girls” from Arkansas, Iowa, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas competed at an elite level unknown to their city sisters. The AAU formed several successful international teams of gifted players that gained fame abroad but that were anonymous at home. Until nearly the last quarter of the century, skilled women basketball players had only one option after high school: the AAU.

      This is the history of these gifted women, their coaches, and their teams—their records, motivations, and personal stories. Extensively illustrated, Just for Fun is the first book to thoroughly explore the complex history of the Amateur Athletic Union’s women’s basketball program and to bring to light the four decades of women’s basketball all but forgotten in the current success of women’s athletics.



      Trade Review
      Ikard (a basketball aficionado and amateur historian) offers a meticulous history of women's basketball in the US - from the first game played at Smith College in 1892 to the 1970s - but he focuses on the AAU in the first half of the 20th century.... This period of women's basketball is rarely discussed, so Ikard's book will be valuable to sports historians.... Highly recommended." - Choice

      "Exceptional chronicle of a sorely overlooked period in American sports." - Ron Wynn, Nashville City Paper

      "Well documented for a history aimed at the general reader, Ikard's work is likely to become a launching point for a renewed look into a corner of women's and sports history overlooked by researchers." - Bill Smith, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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