Tuesday, February 25, 2014

A rant about girls and sport in Britain.


My daughter was in reception when we got the flyer about football sessions on Saturday mornings in the park. I got excited; my eldest daughter loves running around outside and has a competitive streak, this would be perfect for her. We bought tiny shin guards. We turned up, with a couple of her (girl) friends and their mums. Everyone else there, including the instructors, was male.

Molly did one session and told me she wasn’t going back. Neither of the other girls wanted to stick with it, either. It’s possible they just didn’t enjoy it, which is fair enough. But I’m pretty sure that at least some of their reluctance came from the message they picked up loud and clear beneath our encouraging pep talks: this was not the place for them. Where were the girls? Girls spent Saturday mornings swathed in pink, twirling in a ballet class, or maybe in gymnastics. But not on a muddy pitch running about with boys.

While I was writing this, my three year old daughter came up to ask for a cuddle. I gathered her up, kissed her peanut butter-smudged face, and asked: “Bell, do you think you might like to try playing football when you’re at school?”

“No,” she said immediately.

“Why not?”

She gave me an apologetic smile. “It’s for boys.”

When I was a girl I played soccer with girls and boys. I played baseball (see above) and pickup ice hockey, spent afternoons shooting baskets and roller skating. I grew up in America, in the golden age of Title 9, and I enjoyed sports, though I wasn’t good at them or considered “athletic.” In high school, I became one of the arty kids with too many rehearsals after school to go out for the cross country team, which I still regret. But in college, I rediscovered sports, playing intramural women’s soccer very badly but with great gusto. Since then, I’ve been as active as time allows, running and doing excercise classes. I do miss those things you only get from competitive team sports – the companionship, the spirit and the collective drive to win.

For girls to feel comfortable doing sport, they need to be shown that it is theirs as well – and if it takes girls-only football clubs, then that’s what we should give them. So I ask. There is some funding available for girls’ football clubs, I am told by one of the organisers of the boys’ sessions, but no girls seem interested. No one is bothering to try and get them interested, I point out. I offer to hand out flyers at the local schools for a girls-only session and help out with organising, but I am politely rebuffed. I live in Bury, where Sport England is spending £2.3 million on a big campaign, I Will if You Will, aimed at getting women active, and it’s fantastic to see all that’s on offer for us. But if girls don’t learn to love sport when they are young, teaching them to be active as adults will remain an uphill battle.

I feel bad for Sport and Equality Minister Helen Grant, who responded to a question that reflected some unappetising but very real pre-conceptions about sport, and promptly had her head bitten off, with commentators up and down the land quoting her out of context. It’s facetious to pretend that there isn’t something very wrong with women’s sport in this country, whether you like it or not.

But it’s a very welcome conversation to be having, the columnists say – maybe now people will start taking women’s sport seriously in Britain. Yeah, okay. Maybe now, they said, every time a women’s football or cricket team did well in international competition. Maybe now, they said, when female athletes won 22 medals for Team GB at London 2012.  Maybe now, they’re saying at this very moment, as women have won three quarters of the medals at Sochi.

While we wait, another generation of girls is learning that football is for boys. Another generation of girls is learning to value their bodies only for their visual appeal, not for their strength. Another generation of girls is growing up without learning the pleasures of physical activity, without building habits that will prolong their lives. Another generation of British girls is growing into women who will buy pretty pink ballet outfits for their little girls and football shoes for their little boys.

Apparently, it’s already too late for my daughters.

7 comments:

Beauty's Bad Habit said...

I think it's awful that schools support the idea of sports for boys and sports for girls. It's a rant I constantly has throughout secondary school - boys got rugby, football, basketball tennis and gym sessions, girls got rounders, badminton, netball and gymnastics (weaker versions of the guys sports). My hatred towards this is partly why I put zero effort in in PE! Give me a roughty toughty sport any day.

Kate Feld said...

I totally agree... just don't understand what's up with this country sometimes. With football, for instance, it would be so easy to introduce girls' teams. The infrastructure is already there at every park and school - and unlike badminton, hockey etc all you need is a ball, really, so it's easy for anyone to pick up.

Netball and badminton aren't sports kids grow up seeing on telly etc., why shouldn't girls play football and rugby too. And don't get me started on basketball. My 14 year old stepdaughter was keen to play basketball at high school, but no girls team there either.

Unknown said...

brilliant piece, couldn't agree more and I'm a sport-phobic male!

Ged said...

In the mid 1980s I took a break from the wet English summer and coached at the All American Soccer Camp at West Long Brach New Jersey. The girls soccer squads who did college pre-season trainng were skilled, enthusiastic and were treated no differently from the boys who trained. America has a much more enlightened approach to women's football and their success in the world cup shows the impact of that attitude. Soccer / football was a game that any one could play and it enabled a lot of American women to get a low cost university education through scholarships. English women's rugby is poor as girls don't play rugby in schools in any serious way - unlike Irealnd where girls play gaelic football and camogie which are tough games. Changing to rugby is easy for them.

Jim M said...

9259986862Just in case you did not see this.

http://www.burytimes.co.uk/news/11042417.Diana_scores_in_UK_contest_for_top_mums/

Louise said...

I love football and did a football course when I was about 10, as I used to have a kick around outside with my brother and our neighbour (boy of the same age).

I was the only girl. It wasn't the coaches that made it a horrible experience, it was the other boys who wouldn't pass to me, and generally picked on and made fun of me. The coaches did their best and were very encouraging, but I was essentially bullied for a week.

Kate Feld said...

Thanks for all the supportive comments. Louise, what a horrible situation - why should a girl have to put up with bullying just to play football? Its easy to see why girls get turned off, no matter how helpful the adults are. Hearing that makes me so sad - I'm sure you're not alone.

This is why I really think girls football needs to start on more equal footing - ideally in something closer to 50/50 gender split teams but this will never happen, so I think the best solution for now is dedicated girls teams for primary age kids, with female coaches who could be good role models.