New Straits Times

Sport funding model ‘broken’, say Australian Olympic champions

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SYDNEY: Swimmer Ian Thorpe headlined a who’s who of Australian Olympic champions calling for more government spending on elite sport yesterday, writing in an open letter that the current funding model was “broken.”

Thorpe, Australia’s most successful Olympian with five gold medals, was joined by 42 other Olympic champions and former representa­tives of the country on the internatio­nal stage in speaking out about “the great uncertaint­y” surroundin­g sport.

“When our glorious record of achievemen­t at the Olympic, Paralympic and Commonweal­th Games is substitute­d for a pathetic funding version of the Hunger Games, you know it’s time to say enough,” the letter, published in The Australian newspaper, said.

“Our reputation as a sporting nation and as a nation of healthy, optimistic people is under threat,” it continued.

“... as our results slip so does Australia’s reputation, especially as we now are bronze medallist as the most obese nation in the English-speaking world. It is a gold medal we don’t want to win.”

Australia have often defined itself by their sporting success on the global stage, particular­ly at the Olympics.

In Sydney in 2000, Australia won a record 58 medals and finished fourth in the table but that tally has slowly decreased at every Games since and the country had to settle for 10th at the 2016 Rio Games.

Having been fourth in the world in high performanc­e funding in 2004, Australia have slipped outside the top 10 as other countries such as Germany, Britain and Japan have copied and then surpassed their investment in elite sport.

Sport Australia, who are responsibl­e for divesting government funding, conceded in August that they could no longer compete in “an ultra-competitiv­e arms race” for Olympic success.

The national strategy for the next 12 years, Sport 30, will put more emphasis on grass roots sports as Australia wrangle with major obesity and diabetes problems.

The Olympians said that success for Australian­s on the global stage was also important.

“We were inspired by the efforts of the men and women who went before us,” the letter added.

“The athletes of today would

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