The Daily Telegraph

Saracens say England stars will remain

Penalised for wearing too much, criticised for wearing too little, sportswome­n face constant scruntiny when it comes to their performanc­e kit, as Molly Mcelwee explores

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Saracens are confident of keeping hold of their main England stars, despite their relegation from the Premiershi­p this season, after holding crisis talks with Eddie Jones and Warren Gatland. Both the coaches of England and the Lions told the club they would continue to select players such as Owen Farrell and Maro Itoje, even though the club will be playing in the Championsh­ip next season following their punishment for breaching the salary cap.

‘Ithink some people still feel uncomforta­ble with women’s bodies,” French tennis player Alize Cornet says matter-offactly. It is a year and a half since she was given a code violation for removing her T-shirt on court at the US Open, after realising she had it on inside out.

Anyone who has sat through a Rafael Nadal match will be familiar with him whipping his sweatdrenc­hed T-shirts off on court, but he has never received a warning for it. An outraged public response to Cornet’s penalty – which many interprete­d as her being punished for exposing her sports bra on court – led to organisers promptly changing the rules. The United States Tennis Associatio­n also apologised, but Cornet believes the incident was indicative of a “deeper” issue.

“Apparently the chair umpire was just shocked,” she told

Telegraph Women’s Sport, sarcasm seeping through the phone. “It was the most unfair decision, there’s no doubt about it. I didn’t see it as sexist, but I think it’s a deeper problem about the woman’s body, and women in general in sport.”

Most women can remember a time they were made to feel uncomforta­ble in sports kit, whether that is wedgie-pulling in your netball dress, dreaded school swim sessions, or getting tangled in your sports bra. In competitiv­e sport, these experience­s all too often take a more disturbing turn.

In September last year, an Alaskan 17-year-old swimmer was disqualifi­ed from a school meet for allegedly wearing her swimsuit in a revealing way.

Even though the decision was overturned, it caused a media storm. Tennis legend Billie Jean King tweeted that “the constant policing of women’s bodies is offensive, sexist and wrong”, while other commentato­rs alleged racial bias in the decision which went against a black athlete, punished for how a regulation high school swimsuit fitted her teenage body.

Serena Williams, no doubt, can relate. Sporting a tutu, shorts or beaded braids, Williams has spent her entire career being scrutinise­d over her appearance.

After donning a catsuit at Roland Garros in 2018, designed to function as a deterrent to the blood clots that almost cost her life when giving birth to her daughter the previous year, Bernard Giudicelli, the French Tennis Federation president, waded in to announce a ban on catsuits for the following year. “You have to respect the game and the place,” he said.

But respect the greatest champion of your sport’s right to wear what she is most comfortabl­e and healthy in? Forget that.

The choice of attire can affect results, too. The first woman to wear a hijab in figure skating, Zahra Lari, had a point deduction in her debut competitio­n as a 17-year-old. “They immediatel­y gave the deduction for the hijab, they covered it as a prop,” the UAE native says of the decision, which was later overturned. “My coach was more upset than I was, but once I came home it hit me how big of a deal it was.”

The rules have since been altered, but the case underlines how endemic these experience­s are when it comes to elite sports kit and women’s needs.

Ahead of last year’s football World Cup, Nike unveiled national kits designed exclusivel­y for the women’s squads. A watershed moment, at last women footballer­s at the pinnacle of the game would not be wearing kits designed for men. It was about time. Lucy Bronze and her England teammates used to have to cut netting out of their shorts, designed with male genitalia in mind.

Phoebe Schecter, a defensive linebacker in Great Britain’s American football squad, finds that her sport’s equipment – created for a default male body – is putting women at risk of injury. “They’ve started doing girl pads that have a little bit of protection on the chest area. But how do we practise

‘With my old kit, your bikini line was on show. Before a game I’d be shaving , worrying about razor bumps and then not focusing on the game ’

against each other with regular [male] pads which are cut off above the chest? Everything is meant to fit a man.”

Even typically female participat­ion sports can overlook the basic concerns of their athletes. In an interview with Telegraph

Women’s Sport last year, 19-time gymnastics world champion Simone Biles described the emotional impact of wearing a leotard as a teenager. “People are already uncomforta­ble with their body changing [during puberty] and then we have to do it in a leotard in front of the world,” she said. There is no other option.

Gymnastics is a sport with a rule book that includes hair and make-up regulation­s. Following Dutch gymnast Celine van Gerner’s Cats-inspired floor routine at the European Championsh­ips, sporting felinestyl­e eyeshadow, Fig, the sport’s global federation, introduced a new rule banning anything other than “modest make-up”. As US gymnast Margzetta Frazier so aptly tweeted, “Lol ‘modest’ like we’re not already half naked in leotards.”

Former England netball captain Ama Agbeze says players in her sport have previously struggled with the fit of their dresses, for practical reasons. She remembers an earlier version of the national kit that caused pre-match changing-room anxiety because the skimpy under-layer of the dress made players feel exposed.

“With the old kit, when it was knickers, anything you did your bikini line was going to be on show, so it was a worry,” she says. “I get razor bumps, but there’d be times where, just before a game, I’d be shaving and not worrying about the effect of the bumps and the pain – or focusing on the game.”

Though the undershort­s design for the more recent iterations of the netball national kit have thankfully changed, body hair is an issue that continues to polarise opinion. When Adidas included a model with unshaven legs in their 2017 campaign, she received rape threats; a similar Nike effort used a model with unshaven armpits last year and was dubbed “disgusting”.

Even in sport, women cannot escape the impossibly narrow beauty ideals society boxes them into.

Pole vaulter Holly Bradshaw found a happy medium in forgoing more revealing uniforms for an all-in-one suit. Bradshaw first burst on to the elite scene, aged 20, after recording what was at that time the third-highest indoor jump in history. But her celebratio­ns were short-lived when she was allegedly told: “You’ve got a bit of puppy fat, you need to lose it,” she recalls. As a result, she would “not risk” wearing the crop top and pants now, for fear of social-media trolling.

But her challenges with kit do not stop there. This time last year Nike, her sponsor of eight years, chose not to renew its sponsorshi­p deal with her, forcing Bradshaw to find her own kit for the British Championsh­ips, where she competed in her club vest.

It is a situation she says caused her “confusion”, “embarrassm­ent” and played on her mind for weeks. Losing sponsors is a reality of sport, but it took Bradshaw months to find a new one, despite having produced her career-best performanc­es in 2018 and 2019.

Bradshaw believes the industry is too image-driven. “Brands are, in my opinion, [going] more towards a modelling industry than sport,” she says. “They [aren’t] looking at who was top, it’s who looks the best, who has a great Instagram [account], posts cool pictures. That’s what they’re rewarding. It was frustratin­g, it is a significan­t amount of money that is lost.”

In 2008, sprint hurdler Dawn Harper-nelson won the Olympic title in Beijing wearing borrowed spikes because she was without a sponsor. She told The Players Tribune that she believes her skin complexion affected her opportunit­ies at the height of her success. “Endorsemen­ts did not roll in for me,” she said. “I was told, ‘You’re too dark, that’s not what we’re looking for.’ ”

This is the reality: issues with kit not only place an emotional and practical toil on athletes, but also a financial one. While brands’ efforts have improved with norm-defying adverts and bespoke female kit, the age-old social issue of women being valued based on aesthetics continues to permeate sport.

Whether on the street or a court, pitch or pool, the female body still remains firmly within the male gaze.

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