Weekend Herald

Kris Shannon’s World of Sport Sport’s culture often poisonous for women

Females worldwide have to think twice about coming forward when they feel wronged by sportsmen

- Stephen Colbert Burger King Nippon Ham

Of all the reactions arising from the investigat­ion into the Chiefs’ stripper scandal, the most apt was issued by the woman involved in the incident.

“I am disappoint­ed but not surprised,” said Scarlette, after New Zealand Rugby uncovered no evidence to support her allegation­s against a group of players.

Many in this country must have felt the same way: discourage­d by the lack of culpabilit­y for any Chief but far from shocked the saga will be of no detriment to the players’ careers.

That, unfortunat­ely, is the way these stories often conclude and, without casting aspersions on the findings of NZR’s general counsel, being disbelieve­d or silenced is an all too familiar outcome when women experience the dark side of the sporting world.

This week alone, the New York Giants are heading into the new NFL season without Josh Brown, a kicker suspended one game upon the revelation of a 2015 domestic violence arrest and charge. The status of the charge is currently unclear but Brown will be back in week two.

In the English Premier League, Danny Simpson will take the field for reigning champions Leicester City, having incurred no ban after last year being found guilty of assaulting the mother of his child. Instead of missing matches, Simpson was sentenced to 300 hours of community service, which in May was replaced by a curfew when press intrusion prevented the footballer from completing the programme.

And closer to home, Julian Savea will tonight start against Argentina, an All Black who in 2013 was charged with assaulting his then- partner, a charge subsequent­ly withdrawn when the wing completed a police diversion programme.

None of these incidents is identical but, together, the trend formed is one that should trouble fans. And although no outside observer can assign to these athletes guilt or innocence, it’s a pattern that hardly encourages victims of future crimes to speak out.

After all, a sportsman can time and again be accused of an abhorrent act and soon be allowed to resume their high- paid and high- profile profession, the episode rendered little more than a footnote or, even worse, the first page in a redemptive tale. What kind of message does that send to those who insist they were wronged?

It’s much more challengin­g to ascertain players whose careers suffered from committing crimes against women. A disgraced Ray Rice remains locked out of the NFL, but his place on an unofficial blacklist was earned only after video emerged showing the former Baltimore Raven punching his fiancee in the face and knocking her to an elevator floor.

Before, when previous footage merely captured Rice dragging her unconsciou­s body from that elevator? Why, there could have been myriad explanatio­ns. The NFL decided to issue a two- game suspension.

Greg Hardy, alleged to have assaulted his partner, is another former football star mercifully unemployed. Yet that status arrived only after Hardy last year proved a toxic presence playing for the Dallas Cowboys, when a civil settlement had spared a suspension but when almost every sickening detail of his alleged attack had been made public.

Now, no Chiefs player was accused of actions akin to some of the aforementi­oned names. But the end result was essentiall­y the same. A woman who felt harmed eventually found her voice unheard.

And with every dose of lenient discipline, with every community service sentence quashed and every investigat­ion that leaves “disappoint­ed” an alleged victim, the suggestion is only enhanced that sport still functions within a culture that can be poisonous for women.

Which, when considerin­g that those aggrieved in future will surely think twice about the point of pursuing any recourse, is a suggestion increasing­ly difficult to deny. Chad is one nation that has rarely received attention from World of Sport but that is all about to change. The landlocked African nation this week made headlines when, in an attempt to attract tourists, it signed a sponsorshi­p deal with FC Metz. The French Ligue 1 club will this season feature on the front of their shirt ‘ Chad: Oasis of the Sahel’. Which raises questions about priorities, given Chad reportedly shelled out € 12 million ( NZ$ 18m) while being the fourth- poorest country in the world. But Chad and Metz are hardly the first to enter into an unusual partnershi­p. . .

The comedian and television host in 2010 came to the rescue of the United States speedskati­ng team after Dutch bank DSB — their previous corporate sponsor — went bankrupt. Colbert asked his viewers to pledge support through his website and, after raising more than US$ 250,000, delighted in his newfound benevolenc­e when interviewi­ng short track skater Katherine Reutter on The Colbert Report. “How easy is it to swim through water,” Colbert asked Reutter after jokingly ripping Michael Phelps. “You run on top of water with samurai swords strapped to your feet.”

At first glance, nothing too unusual here. Athletes, despite their physiques, like fast food, and sports fans, in fitting with their physiques, absolutely like fast food. But what enhanced BK’s sponsorshi­p of Getafe were the flourishes. Namely, the inside of the Spanish football side’s jerseys was emblazoned with an upside- down image of the BK king, so when a player scored and pulled his shirt over his head the grinning royal was on full display.

Again, normal enough initially. Nippon Ham is a Japanese company which has every right to sponsor sports sides. But it all gets a little amusing when, as is the custom in Japan, the sponsorshi­p is incorporat­ed into the team name. Which is what happened to Sapporobas­ed baseball side the Fighters, who subsequent­ly become known as the Nippon Ham Fighters, which conjured images of kung- fu pigs.

 ?? Picture / photosport. nz ?? New Zealand Rugby CEO Steve Tew and Chiefs CEO Andrew Flexman this week cleared the Chiefs’ players of any wrongdoing over complaints made by a stripper.
Picture / photosport. nz New Zealand Rugby CEO Steve Tew and Chiefs CEO Andrew Flexman this week cleared the Chiefs’ players of any wrongdoing over complaints made by a stripper.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand