The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on women and the Olympics: the athletes caught up – now the IOC must

- Editorial

Strength, resilience and determinat­ion make sportswome­n champions in the field. The same qualities are ensuring that more of them get there. Banned from the first modern Olympics, in 1896, only 22 competed among almost 1,000 athletes at the next games in Paris. This year Britain, the US and China have all sent more women than men to Tokyo, and overall, the number of female competitor­s has almost reached parity with male at last, at 48.8%.

The Games are a rare sporting realm in which women come very close to equality. Most gold medallists will receive the same financial reward from their country whether male or female. Over the years, female Olympians such as Nadia Comăneci and Jackie JoynerKers­ee have enjoyed instant name recognitio­n and drawn spectators, just as male athletes have. Women’s events are valued in their own right.

Yet the Olympic movement remains overwhelmi­ngly male – and it shows. Only a third of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s executive board members are women. The IOC says it is committed to gender equality, and its decision to add more women’s events has unquestion­ably boosted female participat­ion. In other regards, the Olympic movement is falling conspicuou­sly short. The head of Tokyo’s organising committee was forced to resign in February after complainin­g that women talked too much. Last week, in an excruciati­ng press conference, the Australian Olympics chief John Coates – also an IOC vice-president – appeared to publicly order Queensland’s premier Annastacia Palaszczuk to attend the opening ceremony.

Athletes are directly affected by outdated attitudes. This year saw a row over whether breastfeed­ing infants could accompany their mothers, due to Covid concerns. Many women have had to overcome far poorer resources and support at national level; the plethora of female champions on Team GB this year shows that equal funding produces excellence in equal measure, as Stephanie Hilborne, CEO of the Women in Sport charity, points out.

In May, six female fencers urged the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee to ban Alen Hadzic from the Tokyo games over multiple accusation­s of sexual assault, which he denies. Though he was made to travel separately and stay in different accommodat­ion to teammates, he was still allowed to compete. Many see double standards, with women and people of colour judged more harshly than white male athletes. It is striking that the two female faces of this games so far – the extraordin­ary Simone Biles and Naomi Osaka – have both faltered. The pressure that all sports stars face these days is surely magnified for black women; and in Biles’s case even more so, as an outspoken survivor calling US Gymnastics to account for its failure to launch an independen­t inquiry into coach Larry Nassar’s sexual abuse. Yet the determinat­ion of both athletes to prioritise their mental health, to others’ displeasur­e, makes them even more admirable role models.

The Olympic movement is not solely responsibl­e for the challenges that female competitor­s face. Other sporting bodies have a lot to answer for. Broadcaste­rs still get it wrong, and so do fans. For many women, the Olympics is especially joyful as one of the few areas of popular culture in which women’s bodies are celebrated not for how they look but for what they can do; for individual strength, agility and achievemen­t, not whether they please onlookers. Yet research by Cambridge University Press in 2016 suggested that among spectators as well

 ??  ?? American gymnast Simone Biles: ‘an admirable role model.’ Photograph: Mike Blake/
American gymnast Simone Biles: ‘an admirable role model.’ Photograph: Mike Blake/

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