This story originally published online atย The Assembly.
Reynolds Coliseum was packed to the gills when the North Carolina State University Dance Team took the court on a February night. A wolf howl blasted through the loudspeaker, and then the dancers came to life with the bass notes of โMillion Dollar Baby,โ moving in perfect sync to the lyrics.
โDo it, baby, do what I should think / Do it, do it, baby, do what I could think.โ
Clad in the staple of sports entertainmentโblack leggings, sparkly midriff-baring sports bras, and bright red lipstickโthey took a final leap and finished in a half-split.
One dancer stood out: Ryan Cawley, a first-year on the 36-member dance team. He had the same smooth moves, but wore black pants and a black-and-red stylized T-shirt with the word โPACK.โ Cawley is the first male dancer in the teamโs 30-year history and one of only a handful in the country performing with this kind of dance team.
Cawley had no trepidation about joining the all-female group. โI was always kinda surrounded by girls,โ he said. โI was used to being the only guy in the studio, so I donโt really care about being the odd man out.โ
The Cary native has been dancing since the first grade, when heโd follow along in the back of his older sisterโs dance classes. He has studied jazz and hip hop, ballet and contemporary. He danced competitively with L.A. Dance, a studio in Morrisville, and was the captain of the Green Hope High School Dance Team in Cary.
โI was used to being the only guy in the studio.โ Ryan Cawley, N.C. State dancer
Things began to change seven years ago when the Los Angeles Rams added men to its cheerleading squad. (In pro sports, cheerleading is more akin to collegiate dance teams, performing longer routines to music.) Mina Ortega, owner of Pro Action Dance, which provides coaching and choreography to collegiate, NBA, and NFL dance teams, remembers that as a turning point. Sheโs also the coach of the University of Southern Californiaโs team, the USC Trojan Dance Force, which added its first male dancer two years ago. โIt was time,โ she said.

Ortega noted that some teams, both at the pro and collegiate level, are unlikely to follow suit. โSome of them have a brand, and thatโs what it is,โ she said. โThe Los Angeles Laker Girls, itโs right there in the name.โ
Nor are you likely to see guys in the lineup of the Las Vegas Raiderettes, which call themselves โFootballโs Fabulous Females.โ Similarly, UNC-Chapel Hillโs squad is called the Carolina Girls. (The group had its first male dancers years ago when it went by a different name.)
Today, only a handful of schools with dominant athletic programsโthose in the so-called power conferencesโhave male dancers. Among the 68 schools in the ACC, SEC, Big Ten, and Big 12, only seven include a male dancer on their current rosters. Among them are Minnesota, Iowa State, and Kentucky, the latter of which has two male dancers this year. There are also smaller schools with male dancers, such as Hofstra University on Long Island, which has several men on its 27-person team.
Dancing Shoes
Some schools offer scholarships to prospective dance team members. Amanda Roediger, coach of N.C. Stateโs dance team for 17 years, canโt do that, but sheโs still out there recruiting.

โWe send people to a combine in Ohio every year,โ she said. (Thatโs right, a combine for dancers, just like in football, but in this case, itโs a chance for high school dancers to strut their stuff for prospective colleges.) She can offer little more than Adidas gear, but she attracts dancers from out of state who want to be part of N.C. Stateโs program.
N.C. State and other schools also hold dance clinics each year on their campuses for local and out-of-town high school dancers, an opportunity for dancers to get to know a schoolโs program and for the coaches to get to know them. Thatโs where she came across Ryan Cawley. โWe were keeping an eye on him,โ she said.
The decision to put him on the team wasnโt hard. Heโs a versatile dancer, Roediger said, who has a presence on the floor and executes complex routines cleanly. โRyan can translate to all genres,โ she said. He was also a terrific studentโheโs studying civil engineering in collegeโwell-rounded, with supportive parents.
โThe dynamic has been great,โ said Alaina Isaak of Cary, who dances on the team. โHeโs getting every moment he deserves.โ

Roediger and Cawley both knew there would be some challenges. Costuming, for one. โObviously Iโm not going to wear a sports bra,โ Cawley said. They ended up with black pants and branded shirts that were compatible with the different looks of the womenโs uniforms. And Roediger didnโt know if Cawley would be comfortable dancing with pom-poms, so she gave him the option. He had used them in high school, so he was fine with it.
โWe kind of thought it was going to be a trial-and-error year,โ Roediger said. โBut it hasnโt been. Everything we tried has worked.โ
Cawley is not the first male dancer on a collegiate team in North Carolina. Caedmon Akers of Sylva is part of the UNC-Greensboro squad, and Western Carolina University currently has a male dancer. At Elon University, Cullen Zeno danced with the team in 2021-22, his senior year. Zeno, of Lafayette, Louisiana, said he was concerned about negative reactions at first. โLike people are going to think, โA guy on the dance team?โโ
But that reaction never came. โAnd then I was going out there being confident, saying, โIโm going to show you why I am on the dance team.โโ

Roediger knew there might be negative reactions to Cawley. In her day job, sheโs a special education teacher, and sheโs protective of all her dancers. โWe do well checks on everyone,โ she said. With Cawley, โwe were making sure his rooming situation was good, things like that,โ she said.
She was also aware that another barrier had already been broken at N.C. State. Robbie Leske, a senior from Pawling, New York., has been a featured twirler for the Wolfpack for four years, the first man in that role at the school. Leske only considered schools with good twirling programs, and also tried out to twirl at the University of Georgia and Tulane University before deciding on N.C. State.
โI was very worried about it at first, going to a school in the south,โ he said. โBut I have had no problems. Itโs a warm environment. And I am able to stand out a little moreโand thatโs fun sometimes.โ
On a hot day last August, the first football game in Carter-Finley Stadium marked the public debut of this yearโs dance team. Roediger remembers the Walk of Champions, when the dancers parade by fans who gather to welcome the football players. She said she scanned the crowd, watching for signs of anyone who wasnโt welcoming of Cawley.
During the halftime show, โwe put him near one of us,โ she said, so that the coaches could keep an eye out. She kept watching the crowd. But it was just a typical day in the stands. โWe have not had any problems,โ she said. โIโve had more people say not-nice things to our African-American girls.โ

Did she feel like they were making history?
โHistory? Well, I feel like we are making progress,โ Roediger said. โBut yeah, it is history.โ
On the night of Cawleyโs performance in Reynolds last month, the team got more than just the usual crowd. It was ESPN College Game Day, which meant the networkโs anchors broadcast live from the arena and put a focus on the spirit aspect of the game.
After the game, a knot of fans just outside the court waited for members of the Wolfpack womenโs basketball team to emerge. A few approached Cawley, who was still in his uniform. โYou guys are great,โ one woman said. Cawley says heโs open to continuing to pursue dance after college, but heโll have to see where his career takes him. For now, heโs a fan favorite at N.C. State.
As he left the building, with pom-poms attached to his team-issued Adidas backpack, a woman yelled out, โHey, we loved seeing a guy dance!โ
Correction: A previous version of this story said UNC-Chapel Hillโs Carolina Girls dance team had never had a male dancer. The group had male dancers when it went by a different name.
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