Cape Argus

Why is there never money for sportswome­n?

- Cheryl Roberts Cheryl Roberts is a sport activist, publisher and writer.

I ADMIT that over the past 25 years of post-apartheid sport in South Africa, there have been developmen­ts to advance and improve girls and women’s participat­ion in sport and several elite, world class and Olympic champions emerging.

But women’s participat­ion in sport remains massively underfunde­d with some occasional handouts of media and support appearing now and then, here and there.

Its always about there being “no money” to develop and grow women’s participat­ion in sport. Yet, there’s money to support men’s participat­ion, especially golf, football, cricket, and rugby. In sports federation­s that struggle to get sponsorshi­p and funding, it’s always the boys and men that get the bulk of the money to support them.

Men officials of the male-dominated sports of rugby, cricket, football and golf always blame it on sponsors and corporates, saying “corporates don’t want to sponsor women’s sports.”

If it’s the corporates we are blaming for strangling women’s developmen­t and advancemen­t in sport, then why are sports federation­s having business relationsh­ips with corporates who refuse to sponsor and assist the very women who are consumers of their products and supporters of their businesses.

But it’s not only the men but also women, who buy products of the mobile networks that are MTN, Vodacom, Telkom, Cell C. Yet these networks ignore women in sport and sportswome­n.

As I ask these questions, I am reminded of the patriarcha­l-supporting existence of corporates who still thrive on a patriarcha­l, male-power, male-dominant society, who continue to prop up gender inequaliti­es by relying on their patriarcha­l supporting behaviour. And this patriarcha­l support impacts on corporates’ funding relationsh­ips because patriarcha­l-supporting corporates still believe it’s the men in sport who must be dominant even though they are mediocre and male.

Why do corporates get away with their non-support of women in sport? It’s because the mostly male-controlled sport federation­s don’t speak out and women in sport haven’t organised their activism to challenge and call out corporates.

Then there’s the men and few women officials who negotiate the sport sponsorshi­ps with corporates who do so from a position of both being patriarcha­l supporting and the sport federation­s always looking for a corporate to firstly back a men’s event.

It’s always about the men’s participat­ion with the women sometimes getting a look in now and then.

South Africa’s sportswome­n struggle to play at elite levels and compete as internatio­nals. That some sportswome­n have, over the past 25 years, become world class and Olympic champions is a testimony to their resilience.

It’s only when some sportswome­n have achieved at the very top of world sport that some corporates react with a sponsorshi­p relationsh­ip. But why must South Africa’s sportswome­n struggle when they help grow businesses and make profits for corporates?

Women in sport, non-patriarcha­l supporting sports fans and sportswome­n have to become activists and challenge corporates and their male-dominated sport federation­s to disrupt their patriarcha­l-supporting behaviours. We don’t want to go another 25 years whining about the raw deal that women get in sport.

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