Stabroek News

Athletes, teams and leagues confront abuse and bullying

-

NEW YORK, (Reuters) - Painful revelation­s of abuse and misconduct rocked the world of sport in 2021 as athletes from all levels of competitio­n across the globe demanded greater accountabi­lity of trainers, coaches and the governing bodies that oversee them.

A report released in October sent shockwaves through the National Hockey League (NHL) after an investigat­ion found that the Chicago Blackhawks failed to act on allegation­s made by player Kyle Beach that video coach Brad Aldrich sexually assaulted him during the 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs.

Aldrich stated that the encounter was consensual.

The report led to the resignatio­n of Florida Panthers head coach Joel Quennevill­e, who was coach of the Blackhawks when the allegation­s were made, and promises of reform from the upper echelons of the NHL.

“This has to serve as a wake-up call to all clubs that you need to make sure you understand what your organisati­on is doing because you are going to be held responsibl­e,” NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman told reporters, promising change within the league while defending his own handling of the case.

The National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) was forced into a reckoning of its own as The Athletic in September outlined allegation­s of sexual abuse by former North Carolina Courage head coach Paul Riley, after speaking to more than a dozen players he had coached since 2010.

The report and subsequent fallout engulfed the league, prompting the departure of former Commission­er Lisa Baird and demands for reform, as soccer’s world governing body FIFA launched its own investigat­ion.

“(Everybody involved) didn’t have much of a choice than to kind of put their hands up and go ‘Okay, this needs to change,’” league MVP Jess Fishlock told Reuters.

“Do I think now that the league is sitting down going, ‘Ok, let’s have this conversati­on’ – rather than before where they were like ‘We don’t care what you think’? I think that has definitely changed.”

ACTION DEMANDED

Across the globe, athletes demanded action.

“Many of us still have trauma and mental wounds,” two dozen Venezuelan women’s soccer players wrote in an open letter accusing former national team coach Kenneth Zseremeta of abuse and harassment.

Trainers for the Swiss Gymnastics Federation’s women’s team resigned en masse in September after in investigat­ion upheld athletes’ claims of psychologi­cal abuse.

Football Australia set up an independen­t complaints body in October after retired striker Lisa De Vanna said she had been the victim of sexual assault and harassment during her career.

Weeks after promoting fresh conversati­on around athletes’ mental health at the

Tokyo Games, Olympic gymnast Simone Biles appeared before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee to condemn USA Gymnastics, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and FBI for inaction in the Larry Nassar sexual abuse case.

“I blame Larry Nassar and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrate­d his abuse,” said Biles.

On Monday, the victims of Nassar’s abuse reached a $380 million settlement with USA Gymnastics, the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee and their insurers after a five-year legal battle.

“This settlement is about the brave survivors who came forward, forced these organisati­ons to listen, and demanded change,” Michelle Simpson Tuegel, who represents more than two dozen Nassar survivors, said in a joint statement with Tasha Schwikert Moser, co-chair of the Survivors Creditors Committee.

In July, the U.S. Center for SafeSport barred famed coach Alberto Salazar permanentl­y from track and field, citing sexual and emotional misconduct, after American middle-distance runner Mary Cain in 2019 accused her former coach and the now-shuttered powerhouse Nike Oregon project of emotional and physical abuse.

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is an independen­t non-profit organisati­on that provides sports with guidelines on how to provide safe environmen­ts for athletes and training for coaches and administra­tors.

“Culture change is happening at all levels of sport,” U.S. Center for SafeSport

CEO Ju’Riese Colon told Reuters.

“SafeSport accountabi­lity, training and policies are making athlete well-being sport’s top priority but to see it fully realized those resisting change need to get on board, or get out - it’s happening with or without them.”

 ?? ?? U.S. Olympic gymnast Simone Biles is sworn in to testify during a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General’s report on the FBI handling of the Larry Nassar investigat­ion of sexual abuse of Olympic gymnasts, on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 15, 2021. Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS.
U.S. Olympic gymnast Simone Biles is sworn in to testify during a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General’s report on the FBI handling of the Larry Nassar investigat­ion of sexual abuse of Olympic gymnasts, on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 15, 2021. Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana