Boxing Canada boss should have been fired ‘a long time ago’
Three-time world boxing champion Mary Spencer is surprised that Daniel Trepanier still has his job.
“He should have been fired a long time ago,” Spencer said. “A long time ago.”
The eight-time national middleweight champion — and one of Canada’s most recognizable boxers — was among the 121 athletes and coaches who signed Wednesday’s letter to Sport Canada calling for the resignation of Trepanier, Boxing Canada’s high performance director, plus an independent report into what they say is a toxic culture in their sport.
Athletes painted a picture of a hostile environment of homophobic, misogynistic and sexist comments. They wrote about safety concerns including being forced to spar despite have concussion symptoms.
They said there’s a lack of impartiality around things like the dispersal of funds, and said there’s rampant favouritism that clouds decisions around team selection.
“It’s a real problem when the high-performance director of a national boxing federation is openly against women boxing,” Spencer said. “Somebody’s opinion shouldn’t stand in your way while preparing, but when you work with him, the way he treats women, it’s a huge obstacle.”
Spencer was one of Canada’s top medal favourites ahead of the 2012 London Olympics, and so she said Own The Podium poured $140,000 into her training.
“Daniel instead decided to send me and two male boxers to a training camp in Ireland where there wasn’t a female boxer at all,” Spencer said. “I didn’t spar. It showed in my performance. When I learned a few months later that one of these two boxers turned pro and that [Trepanier] was his personal coach, I was mad.
“My coach at the time sent a letter to Boxing Canada brass to tell what happened and how mad we were. To this day, I haven’t heard from them.”
Spencer lost her first bout at the London Olympics 17-14 to Chinese fighter Jinzi Li.
The 37-year-old said she didn’t point any fingers after her shocking elimination.
“But the more I thought about it, the more I remembered how badly things went on the road to London, and the more I thought I should have said something about it,” Spencer said. “When I heard how the 2016 team has been treated, I felt guilty of not talking earlier.”
When asked why Trepanier is still employed by Boxing Canada, Spencer replied: “That’s a good question, one for BC to answer.”
Own the Podium and Boxing Canada commissioned an independent report in 2016 to “identify existing gaps” ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Trepanier
was the high performance director at the time. The results of the review by Ireland’s Performance4Podium, and obtained by the Canadian Press, were damning.
Among the main findings, a clear mandate supported by modern policies and infrastructure doesn’t exist for Boxing Canada to operate a high performing system. The training and development environment around senior athletes “are well behind world-class competitors.”
The report found that only 30 per cent of Boxing Canada’s board of directors believed they had the highest standard of leadership in the high performance program, and only 20 per cent were clear on the HPD role.
Some coaches were found to display a “lack of awareness around performance science and how it can impact performance.” One of the survey comments was: “LOL. It doesn’t seem to be the culture of Canadian boxing to use analytics.”
In its recap, the report said Boxing Canada has “stood still throughout a period of significant change to their sport in a global context.”
Six years later, athletes said they’re fed up.
Boxing Canada’s president of its board Ryan Savage said in a statement Wednesday that “Boxing Canada prides itself on values such as health and safety, integrity, and accountability and takes these concerns very seriously.”
The boxers’ complaints come amid what Sport Minister Pascale St-Onge called a “crisis” in Canadian sport. Hundreds of athletes in both bobsled and skeleton and gymnastics have written similar letters to Sport Canada calling for independent investigations and, in the case of bobsled and skeleton, resignations of senior managers.
Wednesday’s letter was sent to Minister St-Onge, Own the Podium CEO Anne Merklinger, the Boxing Canada board of directors, and AthletesCAN.