Canadian sport now wrestling with winning and well-being
“We do not do this for the medals. Do not misunderstand, we love to win, but it should be done in the proper way.”
Given the current athlete unrest in Canadian high-performance sport, that statement by Norway’s top Olympic official Tore Ovrebo seems profound.
With the word “joy” baked into its sport values, the northern country with less than a fifth of Canada’s population has topped the medal table at the last two Winter Olympic Games.
Norway won in total medals (37) and gold medals (16) in Beijing’s Winter Olympics in February, compared to Canada’s 26, including four gold.
Joy is distinctly lacking in some sectors of Canadian high-performance sport. An unprecedented number of athletes are demanding cultural change from the organizations that oversee them.
New federal sports minister Pascale St-Onge says there’s been accusations of maltreatment, sexual abuse or misuse of funds directed at least eight national sport organizations in her first five months in office and called the situation a crisis.
The trampling of athletes’ mental and emotional health in pursuit of the money to win medals is a common thread in athletes’ grievances.
Medals as a measurement of success isn’t said to be the problem. The thorny question is how to pursue international sport glory with athlete wellness at the forefront, while also holding those in the high-performance sport system, including athletes, accountable for the over $200 million Canadian taxpayers spend annually on it.
Canada as a top-three country in the world in winter sport and top-12 in summer sport is a measurement of success people can understand, but how that’s achieved is in a moment of reckoning.
“Using (medals) as a metric of success is OK, but is shouldn’t be the only metric of success,” twotime Olympic trampoline champion Rosie MacLennan said.
“How do we shift a shortterm, peak-performance incentivized system to one that enables peak performance and high-performance environments while also nurturing the well-being and holistic health of athletes across the entire system? Probably easier said than done.”
Norway and Canada have a lot in common in Olympic and Paralympic sport, including athletes who struggle financially to pursue their dreams.
“The normal high-performance young person in Norway is not well-off,” said Ovrebo, manager of Olympiatoppen.
“They are driven by their motivation and their curiosity to find out how good they can get. That makes an even stronger ethical obligation for us to treat them well.
“Health will always be prioritized higher than performance if there is a conflict.”
Strengthening the quality of relationships within national teams is one of Olympiatoppen’s three stated core tasks, alongside strong daily training environments and preparation for and execution of competitions.
“The national teams are not only measured by the number of medals,” Ovrebo said. “It’s the way they treat each other.
“What we are doing here is to develop humans and sport is just the arena to do that. They are, first and foremost, human beings and they are, number two, athletes.”