Medicine Hat News

Don’t let a pandemic stop you from reaching your goals

- Dragana Vukovic FAME

This year came with a set of challenges none of us could predict, with many asks necessary for our safety. If you are an athlete, or a coach, volunteer, or a parent of an athlete, you know how much your world has changed. We have lost a part of our identity, our outlet, and our coping mechanism at the time we need it the most. I know this is true for all athletes, but I fear the negative impacts of this pandemic might be even higher for female athletes.

Here are some concerning pre COVID-19 statistics regarding girls and women in sport:

• Only 2 per cent of girls ages 12-17 receive the recommende­d 60 minutes of daily physical activity.

• Only 19 per cent of

Canadian women participat­e in sport, compared to 35 percent of Canadian men.

• If a girl doesn’t participat­e by age 10, there is only a 10 per cent chance she will be physically active at age 25

• By age 14, girls are twice as likely to drop out of sport than boys.

• Only 25 per cent of coaches in Canadian sports are women.

It is safe to predict that the current circumstan­ces will make the above stats even worse, and that is something we all have a responsibi­lity to prevent.

To female athletes out there, I urge you to persevere, keep playing your sport despite all difficulti­es that we are facing now.

Play for the love of the game, for the love of being active and in hope that all this will end soon and your hard work will pay off.

Play to be a good example, to be a leader, to one day be able to say “not even a pandemic could stop me from following my goals.” Play to stay physically and mentally healthy.

To all coaches, volunteers, devoted parents and other supporters, your role is even more important now than ever before, our female athletes need you, keep being there for them.

Girls who play sport have higher academic achievemen­t, are more resilient and they are set up for success.

To highlight the importance of females in sport, this past March Medicine Hat College hosted two female Alberta Colleges Athletic Conference championsh­ips over two consecutiv­e weeks for volleyball and basketball. As a proud member of FAME — Females in Action Moving and Empowering — we were able to support this event and use the opportunit­y to promote female sport, and celebrate female athletes and coaches.

The championsh­ips provided an opportunit­y to recognize hundreds of local and regional female athletes, from college players to young aspiring players, as well as female alumni who paved the way for all of us. MHC was awarded the Canadian Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n Community Service Award for its Celebratio­n of Women and Girls in Sport initiative. This is a prestigiou­s national award for which colleges across Canada compete and we have set an example for communitie­s across Canada to follow.

In the spirit of this event and encouraged by the national recognitio­n, lets keep moving forward, keep empowering girls and women to play sports and keep celebratin­g each other’s achievemen­ts, big or small.

Dragana Vukovic is the Coordinato­r with Alberta Sport Developmen­t Centre SE and a member of the Females in Action Moving and Empowering Committee. She can be reached at dvukovic@mhc.ab.ca

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