The Citizen (KZN)

Bare basics lacking at grassroots level

- @wesbotton Wesley Bo on

Acoach at one of Pretoria’s top athletics schools was seen carrying a large bag with him at a track and field meeting last season. And his answer when asked what was in the bag was a little heartbreak­ing. It held used pairs of shoes.

Despite the school producing some of South Africa’s top junior athletes in recent years, most of the children didn’t have their own shoes. Before a race, they would dig into the bag and hope there was a pair available in their size. After their race, they would drop them back in the bag for their team-mates to use.

The problem is not that athletes can’t compete without shoes. Many have, since the days of Zola Budd, and many have succeeded.

But they can’t be competitiv­e in sprint races, hurdles contests, the long jump, or any other discipline which requires the athlete to have traction on the track.

Athletes without specialist shoes in most events other than distance running are at a disadvanta­ge, and it’s not unusual to see teenagers at school meetings across South Africa who are sprinting and jumping without shoes, or temporaril­y borrowing some where and when they can.

And the problem extends far beyond a shortage of shoes, with implements and equipment also in short supply in some areas.

At the Eastern Cape High Schools Athletics Championsh­ips last week, most of the discipline­s were well contested, but the sprint hurdles produced noticeably depleted fields.

In order to race in a technical event like the 100m dash over the barriers, athletes need hurdles to practice with, and if they don’t have the equipment, they will gravitate to other discipline­s or other sports.

No matter how talented athletes are, if they don’t have basic equipment, they will never be on the same level as their peers.

In terms of developmen­t, something’s really got to be done, and in rural areas and townships, somebody’s got to give the talented youth a chance.

A lot of corporate brands make a profit from athletics, using the sport to promote their products, and there are federation­s and government bodies across various tiers that not only receive funding but have partners who can offer solutions.

South African athletics is in a bit of a slump at elite level, with less than a handful of senior track and field athletes currently competing in the top global tier, but the nation would have a far larger pool of talent if the playing field was levelled with more grassroots investment.

Some hurdles delivered to schools would cost money for any company or federation willing to supply them, but the benefits would be significan­t.

Schools could also do with some starting blocks, some javelins and high jump mats.

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