
Ovens: Athletics is, and has been for some time, our leading sport
It comes, then, as little surprise that Ovens believes athletics is, as things stand, Scotland's leading sport.
'Athletics is clearly Scotland's most successful sport at the moment and, in my opinion, has been for the past decade or so,' he says.
'There's a range of factors that go into athletics being such a strong and successful sport but, from my perspective, the most important thing is that the foundations are really solid so it develops from there.'
One of the most headline-grabbing moments so far of 2025 was Neil Gourley's silver medal-winning performance in the 1500m at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing in March.
It was an impressive performance in itself but even more impressive was its contribution to one of the most remarkable statistics in Scottish sport; Scottish athletes have won medals at nine of the past ten major athletics championships, with Olympic silverware and world titles included in that streak.
For Ovens, Gourley's run was satisfying to watch not only because it extended the run of success of Scottish athletes at the highest level, but also because it was, at the grand old age of 30, the Glaswegian's first global silverware.
'Another major medal was fantastic and I'm really pleased for Neil because that medal has been coming for quite some time,' Ovens says.
Neil Gourley won World Indoor 1500m silver earlier this year (Image: Getty Images)
'Neil is part of a generation where there's an ingrained mentality that they will be competing on the world stage for medals and so it was great for him, and the sport, to see it happen.'
Gourley's world indoor silver medal came just weeks before what could be considered an even more significant development; the confirmation that Grangemouth Stadium would remain open.
For several years, Grangemouth Stadium, which is used regularly for junior, senior and masters Scottish athletics competitions, has been under the threat of closure but finally, a solution has been found that will ensure at the very least, the short-term future of the venue and also, hopes Ovens, the long-term future too.
David Ovens (Image: Bobby Gavin/Scottish Athletics)
From the 1st of June, the Grangemouth Community Sports Trust will take over the facility and given the venue's significance for the sport in this country, Ovens is barely able to mask his relief that closure has been prevented. However, he also notes his disappointment that there's hasn't been greater understanding from those at the very top of quite how valuable sports facilities are to this country and its population.
'Grangemouth has been earmarked for closure for a number of years so we've worked hard to reduce what was a significant financial deficit when it was in the hands of the council to a place where it should break even,' he says
'It's a huge thing for the sport to keep Grangemouth open. It's our most important stadium geographically because 50 so many of our athletes can get there within an hour. It's our main national competition venue and it's a really busy stadium so it would have been a tragedy if Grangemouth had closed.
'Our chief executive, Colin Hutchison, put in a power of work and we got very good support from Falkirk Council as well as sportscotland and I think that was because Grangemouth is such a significant stadium for athletics both nationally and locally.
'But I don't think though that there's enough recognition at government level of the importance of these kind of facilities, and it's not just athletics facilities, it's swimming pools, hockey pitches and the rest.
'It goes back to the point that the reason athletics has been so successful in recent years is because of the foundations that are in place and facilities are a big part of that strong foundation. The danger for so many sports is that the foundations are starting to become shaky I don't think, at government level, there's a strong enough recognition of the importance of these facilities.
'Yes, these venues are important from a sporting perspective but I also think they're hugely significant in a societal sense for things like health and well-being and so I would like to see a change in the government's attitude towards this.'
It is, justifiably, Scotland's current crop of world-class athletes such as Laura Muir, Josh Kerr, Eilish McColgan and Jake Wightman who dominate the media coverage afforded to athletics but given these athletes are all in their late-twenties and beyond, it's understandable that the question has begun to be asked as to who, if anyone, is going to fill the boots of these individuals when they inevitably retire.
Ovens, however, is quietly confident that there is a wave of athletes coming through the ranks who will ably back-up the success Kerr, Muir et al have so regularly achieved on the global stage and particularly with the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow just 14 months away, he is keen for some of Scotland's younger athletes to begin to make their presence felt on the international stage.
'This summer, I'm really looking forward to seeing Scottish athletes achieve the qualifying times for next year's Commonwealth Games and I'm looking forward to seeing who's going to emerge,' he says.
'There's Sarah Tait, Brodie Young and Rebecca Grieve who are all out in America and are edging towards world class and there's also the sprinter Dean Patterson who's developing very well so there's a list of names who are looking very exciting. We've got very good depth and so that talent coming through, combined with the fact they can look up to these world-class athletes, makes me feel very optimistic for the future.'
First thing's first, though, and before the Commonwealth Games there's this year's World Championships in Tokyo in September.
Scottish athletes have enjoyed remarkable success at recent editions of the event, including two 1500m world champions in the shape of Wightman in 2022 and Kerr in 2023 and while Ovens would never be complacent about extending Scotland's medal-winning streak at major events, he remains quietly confident of yet more success this summer.
'We can never take for granted how many medals Scottish athletes have won in recent years,' he says.
'Having said that, there is yet another excellent chance this season of more silverware.
'I'd love to see Jemma Reekie get a gold medal and I'd love to see any of Jake (Wightman), Josh (Kerr) and Neil (Gourley) get a medal and continue that run in the 1500 meters.
'I'm confident that we will get some silverware at the World Champs.'
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Glasgow Times
21 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
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South Wales Guardian
21 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Scotland goalkeeper Cieran Slicker has debut to forget in home defeat to Iceland
Luckless home goalkeeper Angus Gunn sustained an injury in the third minute and eventually had to be replaced by the 22-year-old Ipswich stopper, minutes after which he conceded possession before Andri Gudjohnsen beat him with a terrific drive. John Souttar levelled in the 25th minute from a corner but Slicker and his defenders struggled collectively when the visitors regained the lead from a corner, just before the break, with Scotland midfielder Lewis Ferguson putting through his own goal. Slicker was again found wanting in the 52nd minute when he was beaten by a Victor Palsson header, which added the gloss for the visitors. Iceland had lost all six of their previous meetings with Scotland but they deserved their first win. Sturm Graz right-back Max Johnston and Ipswich forward George Hirst made their first starts in an otherwise experienced team with defender Kieran Tierney winning his 50th cap playing in a back five. After a minute's applause to remember former Scottish FA president Jack McGinn, midfielder John McGinn's grandfather, who died last month aged 92, play started then soon stopped when Gunn – starting as Craig Gordon was injured – stayed on the ground after landing awkwardly. After some treatment, the 29-year-old was replaced by Slicker, who endured a nightmare start. His clearance was immediately returned to Gudjohnsen – son of former Chelsea and Barcelona striker Eidur – and from 20 yards, he drove the ball high past Slicker. Two more poor kicks from the keeper did nothing for confidence. In the 21st minute, good pressing from McGinn won him possession inside the Iceland penalty area but from his pinpoint cross, Hirst headed over from six yards. Then after Slicker had gathered a drive from Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson at the second attempt, the Hirst then tested Iceland goalkeeper Elias Olafsson with a drive which was tipped over the crossbar but from Johnston's corner, Souttar stooped to head in from six yards. Scotland began to find some flow but when Albert Gundmundsson delivered a corner in the 44th minute, Slicker and his defenders failed to deal with it and the ball ricocheted off a couple of players before it came off Ferguson and over the line. Boos rang around the stadium at half-time and there was more consternation after 52 minutes when Palsson's header from a Gudmundsson free-kick went through the hands of Slicker, with VAR confirming the goal after a suspicion of offside. The Ipswich keeper was then sarcastically cheered by some of the Tartan Army after a comfortable collect. At the other end, Hirst's effort from close range – it looked like the ball came off his shoulder following a Johnston cross – was brilliantly saved by Olafsson. The Iceland keeper was beaten in the 63rd minute by Hirst after parrying a Scott McTominay shot, but the Napoli midfielder was ruled offside. Motherwell midfielder Lennon Miller came on to make his Scotland debut in the 68 minute, along with striker Che Adams and defender Scott McKenna, by which time the home side had gained the initiative. Olafsson tipped McGinn's clever chip over the crossbar in the 88th minute but there was no late Scotland siege.


Scotsman
41 minutes ago
- Scotsman
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Scotland failed to clear a corner into their box with the ball eventually ricocheting off Lewis Ferguson from just a few yards out and past Slicker's despairing dive. Groans and loud boos greeted the referee's half-time whistle. Clarke had plenty of work to do during the interval. While Scotland had posed a threat in the final third, they were playing with a real lack of energy and purpose. Things went from bad to worse when a powerful header from Victor Palsson slipped straight through Slicker just seven minutes into the second half to increase Iceland's lead, with the goal allowed to stand following a VAR check. This made for far from entertaining viewing for the 33,000 crowd in attendance. Hirst headed a Johnston cross back across goal shortly after, but Olafsson was equal to it. Hirst then thought he had scored his first international goal just beyond the hour mark only for his tap in to be ruled out with McTominay caught offside after forcing an initial save from Olafsson. Clarke spoke before kick-off about the need to integrate more young players into the senior system and a debut was dished out to Motherwell's teenage midfield sensation Lennon Miller. But there was little else to cheer about as fans started to flock out of the ground their numbers. This was a night to forget for Clarke and his players. Just THREE wins in 24 friendlies now for Scotland as focus now shifts to Monday night's second summer outing with minnows Liechtenstein in Vaduz before the 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign gets underway in September. Here is how the Edinburgh Evening News rated the players at Hampden. 1 . GK: Angus Gunn - 5/10 Handed an opportunity to re-establish himself as the No.1, but lasted just three minutes before appearing to land awkwardly and roll his ankle as he came out to claim a high ball. Hobbled off and now a major doubt to face Lichtenstein. | SNS Group Photo Sales 2 . RWB: Max Johnston - 7/10 Rewarded with his first senior start after helping Sturm Graz win the Austrian Bundesliga title, the 21 y/o provided an excellent inswinging cross for Souttar's leveller. Posed a real threat going forward. A bright performance. Subbed. | SNS Group Photo Sales 3 . RCB: John Souttar - 6/10 Stooped down low to head home the equaliser from Johnston's corner after wriggling away from his marker. | SNS Group Photo Sales