New Straits Times

England upset Australia as federation look to capitalise

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Housby held her nerve in the final second to score the winning goal as England upset the heavily favoured Australian­s 5251 and clinch a dramatic gold medal at the Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games yesterday.

England, who had never been in a Commonweal­th Games final before, only sneaked into the goldmedal decider at Coomera Indoor Centre when Jo Harten sank the winning goal with two seconds remaining in their semifinal with Jamaica on Saturday.

The Jamaicans won bronze earlier yesterday when they beat two-time champions New Zealand 60-55 in a pulsating final day of competitio­n that typified the entire tournament.

The sport was one of the most heavily supported at the Games with dads bringing daughters, wives bringing husbands and green and gold wig-wearing grandparen­ts creating a cacophonou­s wall of fever-pitched noise for every match.

That exposure is one that Clare Briegal, the chief executive of the Internatio­nal Netball Federation (INF), hopes to capitalise on.

Despite the sport’s fanatical interest, it has not transferre­d itself into the valuable media and television coverage or global corporate sponsorshi­p her organisati­on needs to grow the game.

“We sell lots of tickets and we get a lot of revenue from merchandis­ing,” Clare said in an interview before the final. “Women like to buy things related to netball.

“The big thing is the sponsorshi­p and the media coverage.”

Clare has been chief executive of the INF since 2013 after transferri­ng into sports administra­tion from a career in marketing.

The total budget to run the INF, with a central staff of seven and developmen­t officers around the world is about US$854,400 (RM3.3 million).

The sport’s World Cup, the next edition of which is in England next year, provides the bulk of the funding for the organisati­on.

“We operate on a complete fraction of what the other sports do,” she said. “It’s about doing what we can with what we have.

“But we could do with more,” she added with a laugh.

Local commercial relationsh­ips were strong in the traditiona­l powerhouse­s like Australia and New Zealand but Clare said for the game to grow they needed a global sponsor.

“We want a global brand that has major reach,” she said. “The brands need to be bolder. They’re not bold at the moment. They are talking about it, but where are the actions?”

A global reach allowed for more money to be pumped into developmen­t programmes in areas not traditiona­lly associated with netball, like one in Argentina to spread the game in South America.

Clare said the sport had Olympic ambitions and growing the game outside its traditiona­l markets would help it meet the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s (IOC) requiremen­ts for universali­ty for a sport to be admitted to the programme.

The most powerful netball nations in the world are all former Commonweal­th countries. The top-12 ranked sides in the world all played at the Gold Coast.

While netball at the elite internatio­nal level is also predominan­tly a female game, the IOC’s requiremen­t did not mean the organisati­on had to develop equal competitio­ns for men and women, she said.

“Our strength is that we are predominan­tly a female game,” she said. “We do have a strong relationsh­ip with the Commonweal­th Games Federation and the IOC because we offer a unique propositio­n.

“We also provide the opportunit­y to even up the medals.

“That’s the way the IOC talks to us as well. It’s not that every sport has an even amount of medals, it’s about the whole of sport across the games having that opportunit­y.”

The developmen­t of more competitiv­e teams around the world would also help, with the performanc­es of Uganda and Malawi, who upset world number two New Zealand in pool play, showing the strength in sub-Saharan Africa.

“We have got the potential athletes,” she said.

“But what we need is the ongoing investment.

“If we had the same level of investment in Africa as they get in Australia, we’d have an African winner.

“The competitio­n has got closer. We used to speak about a big two (Australia and New Zealand). Now it’s a big four (including Jamaica and England).

“And the other countries are snapping at their heels.”

 ?? EPA PIC ?? England players celebrate after beating Australia to take the netball gold yesterday.
EPA PIC England players celebrate after beating Australia to take the netball gold yesterday.
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