The Timaru Herald

Coll fires up over squash omission

- Squash

aaron.goile@stuff.co.nz

Top New Zealand men’s squash player Paul Coll has hit out at news his sport has again been snubbed for inclusion in the Olympic Games.

Squash’s hopes of finally becoming an Olympic sport were again crushed when the four additional proposed sports for Paris 2024 were announced yesterday.

Along with chess, billiard sports and karate (with the latter to feature next year in Tokyo), squash was overlooked in favour of breakdanci­ng, climbing, skateboard­ing and surfing, with those four sports to await final approval from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) in December next year.

Climbing, skateboard­ing and surfing have already been confirmed for Tokyo 2020, while breakdanci­ng was held at last year’s Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires.

Though squash has been held at the Commonweal­th Games since 1998, it is now four times the sport has unsuccessf­ully campaigned for Olympic inclusion.

Coll, the world No 6, who is in Chicago in preparatio­n for the world championsh­ips which start this weekend, couldn’t believe what he was waking up to, posting on Twitter: ‘‘Woke up to this news at 6am. It’s now 8:14am. And still can’t process what the f$&@ is going on!? #help’’

A 2024 Olympics could have been a real target for 26-year-old Coll, if perhaps a stretch too far for top Kiwi women’s player Joelle King, the 30-year-old who’s at No 3 in the world.

In a statement, the World Squash Federation and Profession­al Squash Associatio­n met news of their sport being overlooked ‘‘with great disappoint­ment’’.

‘‘The proposed list of four sports only, of which three sports are already confirmed by the IOC on the Tokyo 2020 Olympic programme, Sure, Scott Robertson’s all the rage, but this is ridiculous.

Organisers of the 2024 Paris Olympics have revealed breakdanci­ng is on their wishlist for ‘sports’ at the Games.

Climbing, surfing and skateboard­ing were also listed, but surprising­ly there were no calls for Rubik’s Cube races, hacky sack competitio­ns or Jazzercise routines.

The Crusaders coach is our most famous breakdance­r. He’s 44.

Behind him it’s Joe Moana – the white-gloved, snake-hipped star of the video for the 1983 hit Poi E. After that – um, no one? That’s because breakdanci­ng – bar Robertson’s triumphal displays – were last popular in the mid1980s. If you were in high school then – just hypothesis­ing, of course – you had to be careful where you walked down corridors, less you trampled on some enthusiast­ic fourth-former’s head as he spun furiously on the slick floor.

Yet those entrusted with organising the XXXIII Olympiad feel it should re-emerge alongside the 100m sprint, 50m freestyle, heavyweigh­t boxing, the gymnastics beam and the marathon.

Is there a breakdanci­ng

leads to a belief that Paris 2024 and the IOC favoured sports already in the Olympic programme, leaving practicall­y no opportunit­y for other sports,’’ it read.

In a separate statement, PSA chief executive Alex Gough explained the process that was gone through, and some frustratio­n at the timelines of decisions.

Gough noted squash had made huge strides in areas such as innovation, equality, sustainabi­lity and youth engagement – all of which matched criteria required for Paris 2024 and the IOC.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Scott Robertson may have brought breakdanci­ng into the public domain but whether it’s a genuine Olympic sport is much less certain.
GETTY IMAGES Scott Robertson may have brought breakdanci­ng into the public domain but whether it’s a genuine Olympic sport is much less certain.
 ??  ?? World-class Kiwi Paul Coll can’t believe squash has missed out again on inclusion in the Olympic Games.
World-class Kiwi Paul Coll can’t believe squash has missed out again on inclusion in the Olympic Games.
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