By Gerald L. Maatman, Jr., Jennifer A. Riley, Katherine L. Alphonso, and Jamar D. Davis
Duane Morris Takeaways: On May 28, 2026, in Ashley Schroeder et al. v. University of Oregon, Case No. 6:23-CV-01806, 2026 WL 1494043 (D. Or. May 28, 2026), Judge Michael J. McShane of the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon – without deciding whether the University of Oregon adequately supports or invests in women athletics – reaffirmed that the typicality requirement for class certification cannot be met when “there is a danger that absent class members will suffer if their representative is preoccupied” with its own unique defenses. The ruling is a significant one for corporate counsel and provides a blueprint for defense of class action claims.
Case Background
In the 2000s, particularly at the collegiate level and among Division 1 institutions in warm-weather conferences, beach volleyball was a rapidly growing sport. Id. at *2. In 2009, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”), under its Emerging Sports for Women program, designated women’s beach volleyball an “emerging sport” for women. Id. Notably, the NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program was designed to encourage schools to create more opportunities for women’s athletic participation to meet the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendment of 1972 (“Title IX”). Id.
As a state educational institution, the University of Oregon (the “University”) receives federal funds and is therefore subject to Title IX requirements. Id. at *1. In 2013, the University’s athletic department announced the addition of women’s volleyball to its roster of varsity teams. Id. at *2. Since its announcement, the University has worked to approve new beach volleyball facilities, provide locker rooms, make scholarships available for recruitment, and hire a new coach. Id. It currently sponsors eight men’s varsity teams (baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, tennis, indoor track and field, and outdoor track and field) and twelve women’s varsity teams (acrobatics and tumbling, basketball, beach volleyball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, and (indoor) volleyball). Id. at *1. The University also hosts forty-one club sports teams, including but not limited to rowing, which operate outside of the school’s athletic department and are generally student organized. Id. at *1-2.
Plaintiffs — consisting of female student athletes attending the University, five of which are current or former members of the women’s beach volley team (“Beach Volleyball Plaintiffs”) and four of which are current or former members of the women’s club rowing team (“Rowing Plaintiffs”) — filed a complaint alleging the University continues to violate Title IX by depriving its female student-athletes of equal treatment, equal access to athletic financial aid permissible under federal law, and equal opportunities to participate in varsity athletics. Id. at *1.
In pursuit of their claims, Plaintiffs asked the Court to certify the following classes: (1) Equal Treatment and Benefits Class defined as “all current and future female students who participate or will participate in intercollegiate varsity athletics at [the University]”; (2) Damages Class for the Equal Treatment and Benefits claim; (3) Equal Financial Aid Class defined as “all current and future female students who participate or will participate in intercollegiate varsity athletics at [the University] and do not receive all athletic financial aid permissible under federal law”; (4) Damages Class for the Equal Financial Aid claim; and (5) Effective Accommodation Class defined as “all present and future female students at [the University] who are being deprived of the opportunity to participate on women’s varsity intercollegiate athletic teams.” Id. at *3-4.
The District Court’s Decision
Judge McShane denied class certification for four of the five requested classes, namely the Equal Treatment and Benefits Class, both Damages Classes, and the Effective Accommodation Class. Id. at *5-8. The Court stayed its class certification consideration as to the Equal Financial Aid Class pending final disposition of the underlying claim on its merits. Id. at *4-5.
With regards to the Equal Treatment and Benefits Class, the Court held Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a)’s typicality requirement ultimately prevented certification of the class. Id. at *6. While factual variations between a named plaintiff and proposed class members do not per se defeat typicality, typicality cannot be met when “there is a danger that absent class members will suffer if their representative is preoccupied with defenses unique to it.” Id. at *6 (internal citation omitted).
Here, rather than discussing all purported class members, Plaintiffs focused almost exclusively on the unique experiences of the Beach Volleyball Plaintiffs. Id. For example, unlike most of the other women’s varsity teams, the beach volleyball team practiced and competed off campus; until September 2025, the beach volleyball team was the only varsity team without its own locker room; and the beach volleyball team was the only varsity team without a dedicated full-time head coach who was not also coaching another team. Id. Moreover, the Beach Volleyball Plaintiffs “would need to address whether their participation in an ‘emerging’ varsity sport influences the merits of their Title IX claim.” Id. The Court expressed concern that addressing the unique experiences of the Beach Volleyball Plaintiffs would steal the focus of the litigation, creating an impermissible danger to absent class members. Id.
With regards to the two Damages Classes, the Court held a class action is not a superior method to litigate Plaintiffs’ damages claims because there are “too many distinct individual determinations that frustrate [class action] manageability. Id. at *7; see Fed. Rule of Civ. Prod. 23(b)(3). Again, the atypical experiences of the Beach Volleyball Plaintiffs would require individualized inquiry into any alleged liabilities and/or applicable remedies. Id. In addition, individualized inquiries would be needed “to determine which student-athletes were eligible for various forms of financial aid and the amount of aid they hypothetically would have received.” Id. This is only further complicated by “the University’s policy of allocating financial aid on a team-by-team basis and allowing coaches to make discretionary awards to student-athletes,” resulting in a requisite analysis into which student-athletes may have been eligible for aid but were not necessarily awarded scholarships because of other individualized considerations. Id.
With regards to the Effective Accommodation Class, the Court held the Rowing Plaintiffs were not members of the proposed class because they failed to demonstrate “they have the abilities to participate in varsity athletics . . . ” as their rowing times were markedly lower than the worst performing Division 1 rowing teams. Id. at *8 (emphasis in original). As such, Rowing Plaintiffs cannot be deprived of the opportunity to participate in varsity athletics. Id. Moreover, the Rowing Plaintiffs’ “inability to compete on a varsity level subjects them to a unique defense that defeats typicality.” Id. As mentioned above, rowing was a club sport operating outside of the school’s athletic department.
An interesting focus in the Court’s ruling was its dicta regarding the “proverbial elephant in the Title IX room” — men’s college football. Id. at *2. The Court reasoned that college football has evolved into a highly commercialized enterprise requiring investments—“extensive game-day operations and security; expansive locker room and training facilities; specialized coaching staffs numbering in the dozens; strength and conditioning programs; sports medicine and physical therapy personnel; recruiting operations; charter travel; housing and meal programs; academic tutoring; scholarships; and year-round training infrastructure” — comparative to the scale of its revenue. Id. at *2-3. Specifically, Title IX compliance cannot be measured solely on a dollar-for-dollar basis and must be “viewed across the athletic program as a whole.” Id. at *3.
Implications For Universities And Other Title IX Institutions
The Court’s message to the defense bar here is clear: continue to distinguish the named plaintiffs from the proposed class members (through factual distinctions, discrete issues, shortcomings on judicial efficiency, and unique defenses) as much as possible to oppose class certification. The opinion also provides helpful insight into how the statutory and regulatory framework of Title IX permits disparate expenditures among varying collegiate sports (namely men’s football when compared to other sports), serving as a defense into the extraordinary institutional investments associated with men’s college football that does not run counter to the aims of Title IX.

