The Chronicle

Simply no escaping abuse in AFLW star’s harsh reality

-

ASOLITARY preseason training run at her local football club was the last place that Sarah Perkins expected to be sledged.

Perkins was doing interval running in preparatio­n for another AFLW season when an older man abruptly stopped her.

“He just made the comment, ‘Why are you running like that?’ ” Perkins said.

“He said something along the lines of, ‘You’re too big for that, you are wasting your time’.

“I was really taken aback by it and found it quite offensive.

“I tried to be as polite as I could at the time but just told him that was not OK and I hoped he was ashamed to make those comments.

“Thankfully he left the area really quickly and I could continue my session, but I was pretty hurt and upset by it.”

It wasn’t the first – or last – time that Perkins had been trolled about her body image as a female athlete rather than her sporting abilities.

Last March, she hit back at a pair of online trolls who body shamed her over a photo posted on Twitter by the Gold Coast Suns.

One anonymous user replied to the photo by saying “Peak athleticis­m”, before another followed up by writing “I think she should go for a jog”.

“I’ve called it out a couple of times on social media and made it public that it’s not OK,” Perkins said.

“There’s plenty of trolls out there that are going to let you know that they don’t like the way that you look. We’ve got to remember that everyone’s built differentl­y.

“It did affect my mental health for a fair while. My father had passed away so I was probably already a little bit cut and grieving.

“I like to think I’ve got thick skin but I’m a big teddy bear on the inside, which I try to hide.”

Body shaming is an issue faced by female athletes not just across the

AFLW but also across the wider sporting landscape.

Sydney Swans AFLW general manager Kate Mahoney has previously held high-level sports science and physiother­apy positions with the Australian women’s cricket team and the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n and said a shift of thinking was required. “To perform in all different sports requires all different body compositio­ns, and sometimes people judge women far too quickly and really unfairly on how they look rather than how they perform,”

Mahoney said. “Players are focusing on performanc­e. They’re measuring themselves on things like power or speed or endurance or whatever they need for their sport.”

Mahoney said it had to be remembered that some players entering the AFLW had not had remotely comparable talent pathways to the men.

“The pathways in the female game have only been establishe­d in the past five years or so where they have access to strength and conditioni­ng coaches and running coaches and really good football coaches,” Mahoney said.

“Bodies take time to adjust and adapt and we’re seeing the results of that now with some really fantastic athletes out on the field.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia