The Citizen (Gauteng)

Some codes in danger of total collapse

- Wesley Bo on

Before this pandemic started kicking all of us in the teeth, Olympic sports in this country were already in trouble – Now, it seems, they’re on a hiding to nothing.

While football, rugby and cricket have done everything they can to regain some sort of normality during lockdown, many athletes in smaller codes have been left completely stranded.

Some codes, including swimming, tennis, netball and golf, have been able to at least get things going again with reduced fixtures lists, but others remain locked at a standstill.

Track and field athletes and road runners are fuming, with no real attempt to relaunch domestic athletics just six months out from the Olympic Games, and without competitio­ns, they have no way to prepare.

They also have no way to make income from prize money, and their sponsors’ patience must be wearing thin with no return from their investment­s.

With beaches locked down, surfers are in the same boat, it’s nigh impossible to prepare for the Olympics if they can’t even hit the waves.

Meanwhile, restrictio­ns due to social distancing have prevented mass participat­ion events from taking place, blocking the significan­t income received from the amateur arms of the various codes, while broadcaste­rs won’t e invest in federation­s if they have nothing to broadcast.

Granted, these restrictio­ns have been implemente­d to try stop the spread of Covid, and Government can’t be blamed for that.

But with many sports already hanging by a thread before the pandemic started, they have now been completely exposed, and it’s becoming harder and harder to see how we’re going to send a team to the Tokyo Olympics (if it takes place).

Shockingly, the national hockey teams have even turned to crowd funding platforms to ensure they have the resources to send squads to Tokyo, with no guarantee that the SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) will be able to back them after wasting much of its resources on legal battles in recent years.

It’s a sad state of affairs, and if the powers that be do not find a solution soon, some codes are going to completely collapse.

We can turn to the pandemic as an excuse, but the reality is that this was a problem before someone in China ate a bat.

The lockdown has stripped multiple codes of the thin veil of security they had, and those which were struggling before the lockdown are now in serious trouble.

Profession­al athletes in these codes, who don’t know where to turn to save their careers, have every right to be upset.

Wouldn’t you be too?

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