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As women start to shine in the Olympics, Lizzie Armitstead raises sexism in sport

Silver medal winner makes comments on eve of her Time Trial

As the women in Team GB prove their worth yet again with a gold medal (finally!) in the women's rowing pairs, Lizzie Armitstead, silver road race winner, has spoken out about the 'overwhelming sexism' in sport.

It's a valid point - the Tour de France is all about the men, who benefit from the vast sums of money sunk into teams like Team Sky - and look who actually rode to victory when Olympic crunch time came around.

The Times (£) reported on how Japanese women footballers and the Australian women's basketball team had to travel to London in economy seats while the men put their feet up in business class.

“It can get overwhelming and frustrating, the sexism I’ve experienced in my career,” said Armitstead.

“If you focus on it too much you get very disheartened.”

Emma Pooley has also voiced similar concerns about the visibility of women's cycling.

In the Guardian, she said: "A lot of women's teams you're lucky if they buy you a sandwich at the race… sponsors keep pulling out of races so they get cancelled… the calendar has been more than decimated.

"I get enough to live off, better than most women in the sport. The depressing thing is that there is so much money in cycling but it all stays in one bit of the sport, not much of it trickles down."

Armitstead even said that she wanted to bring up the subject with Pat McQuaid, UCI president, but "didn't want to come across as negative and moaning".

Well Lizzie, we think he might just sit up and take notice of you now.

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39 comments

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farrell replied to thereandbackagain | 11 years ago
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thereandbackagain wrote:

Another is how do you actually get into sports riding?

My thought is that you get people on to bikes first, make it something people "do" and the sporting interest will naturally follow.

I'd kicked a football around long before I got my first kit or boots or had even seen a football pitch.

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Carvers | 11 years ago
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i would personally watch any womens cycling events as avidly as I would the mens event (including Giro or TdF) so I really wish that Sky or ITV or C4 poick up the rights to the Giro Donne or La Grand Boucle now that it's getting such good exposure at London 2012.

Agree re the Rapha comment thereandbackagain, they really do seem to be the only "mainstream" company to treat womens cycling as a complete and logical equal rather than the normal almost niche approach that a lot of the industry sway towards (and that's sadly if they stray that way at all). Wait to see their upcoming Giro Donne film too, that should be a good example of their approach to all of this.

So in general, just please please please, put more cycling - and specifically more womens cycling - on the box...please!!

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thereandbackagain | 11 years ago
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Hogwash, mikroos.

It's a commercial enterprise, that's for sure, but there's a market there to be opened up, expanded and promoted. Once you grow the overall pie, there's more to go around.

It's a vicious circle at the moment. Most bike & equipment manufacturers really don't appear to understand female cyclists at all. They take the approach of "shrink it and pink it" - which is pathetic. Women don't like what's offered, and don't buy it.

Rapha (cue hissing from some of the readers, no doubt) get it. I think women are possibly more willing to pay for quality, as they've not had years of expectations of crappy, stinky, nylon & lycra junk forced on them. And say what you like about Rapha, they were founded on identifying a completely new area of cycling products that no-one else had targeted, and have done very well out of it. Why can't they do it again?

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mikroos replied to thereandbackagain | 11 years ago
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@thereandbackagain

How about you actually determine the number of women taking up pro or club cycling (or even training seriously) and women watching sports? Both are MUCH, MUCH lower than the number of man in each of these categories.

I happen to work in a bike shop and what I can say is that about 90% of my customers are men. How can you expect sponsors to invest their money in women's cycling then?! Please bear in mind that the prices of equipment and other costs related to sponsoring are about the same in women's and men's cycling, so the return of investment is much lower in women's cycling.

Like I said, this has nothing to do with any kind of hostility. It's just a simple and measurable fact that the women's sports market is way smaller.

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thereandbackagain replied to mikroos | 11 years ago
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mikroos wrote:

@thereandbackagain

How about you actually determine the number of women taking up pro or club cycling (or even training seriously) and women watching sports? Both are MUCH, MUCH lower than the number of man in each of these categories.

I happen to work in a bike shop and what I can say is that about 90% of my customers are men. How can you expect sponsors to invest their money in women's cycling then?! Please bear in mind that the prices of equipment and other costs related to sponsoring are about the same in women's and men's cycling, so the return of investment is much lower in women's cycling.

Like I said, this has nothing to do with any kind of hostility. It's just a simple and measurable fact that the women's sports market is way smaller.

You've misunderstood my point. All you're doing is arguing for the status quo.

From my professional experience, I know that you can generate demand by sending out the right messages, encouraging people to think about what they want, what they can expect, then support those expectations. That's how you get people to change behaviours, at least in part.

Perhaps the heavy weighting towards men in your shop is partly due to the bias in your marketing, your customer service, your merchandise selection? Have you surveyed women to understand what would stop them from coming in and buying?

On a separate point, costs per media exposure are going to be way, way lower for women's cycling than men's there's not such a premium placed on the sport, so it'll be a very cost-effective sponsorship opportunity for the right brand.

Commonly, women feel intimidated by the attitude of bike shops, and that lack of confidence will put them off. Also, most manufacturers women's product lines are appalling.

Like I said, someone is going to realise this eventually, and actually start marketing effectively to female cyclists. Based on your attitude, that's not going to be where you work, unfortunately.

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Mountainboy | 11 years ago
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Yeah and if you think back to the women's road race it was boring wasn't it...

No, it was every bit as good (better) than the men's. I'd watch that every day if I could.

Time for broadcasters to step up and give more people the opportunity to watch women's sport.

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mikroos | 11 years ago
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With all due respect for her and her efforts, why doesn't she simply understand that the amount of money flowing from sponsors is directly related to popularity of the sport? If only people actually wanted to watch women's cycling, I'm sure she would be earning twice as much as now or even more.

It's got nothing to do with sexism or hostility towards women, it's just a matter of popularity and business.

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waveydavey replied to mikroos | 11 years ago
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Quote:

It's got nothing to do with sexism or hostility towards women, it's just a matter of popularity and business.

Does that statement infer there is an inherent problem in society?

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rggfddne replied to waveydavey | 11 years ago
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If you like. Or it's biology.

People tend to watch the best in any given area of sport, and women are less likely to be the best - in some sports (e.g. weightlifting), because of basic physiology, in others (e.g. motorsport) because you need investment/encouragement from an early age and parents are less likely to give that to girls because it's simply less likely to occur to them that their daughter could be world champ some day, so it's self-reinforcing.

You can either have a sport open to men and women will almost never rise to the top - or separate, you have prominent women athletes, but a smaller audience because you don't have the best.

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