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Why are female coaches still an endangered species?

Why are female coaches still an endangered species?

Glasgow Times4 days ago

Women being good athletes and being deserving of recognition is becoming, whisper it, normal. In contrast, though, the progress made when it comes to representation of female coaches has been negligible, if there at all.
The coaching world is well and truly dominated by men.
Yes, there's pockets in which female coaches are more commonplace - invariably it's within women's sport - but on the whole, coaching remains a man's game.
The need for more female coaches was brought into the spotlight this week with the launch of Judy Murray's 'Learn to Lead' initiative, which aims to 'equip and empower young girls to become Scotland's next generation of sporting leaders'.
Murray's goal is not only to encourage more females into coaching - she ultimately wants to see more women in non-athlete roles across the board including fitness trainers, physios, management and in the boardroom - and she's right in the assertion that women are outnumbered in pretty much every area of sport, but it's within the coaching sphere that the disparity between male coaches and female coaches is so clearly apparent.
Judy Murray is a huge supporter of increasing the number of female coaches in sport (Image: Connor Mollison) If we take elite sport first, and specifically elite men's sport, then female coaches are like black rhinos in that they're such an endangered species that they're almost impossibly hard to spot. The situation is better in women's elite sport with female coaches more commonplace. But despite having a greater presence in women's sport, female coaches remain chronically outnumbered by male ones.
Murray knows what it feels like to exist in a male-dominated world; for the entirety of her coaching career, she was either the lone women in the room, or was one of only a tiny group of women in a sea full of men.
The picture at grassroots level is not much better than in elite sport. Across grassroots sport, male coaches, again, dominate the landscape.
Indeed, research released earlier this year which was conducted by YouGov on behalf of UK Sport reported that only 38 percent of sports coaches are female and perhaps most worryingly, this is a 6 percent drop from two years ago.
There's a number of reasons why having female coaches is not just important, but vital.
Firstly, there's the 'if you can't see it, you can't be it' argument. The presence of female coaches shows young girls that coaching is a viable path for them to choose.
We've seen the benefits of young girls starting to realise that it is entirely feasible to dream about becoming an elite athlete - the increased profile of women's sport has made becoming a professional athlete a legitimate career goal for young girls - but the dearth of female coaches means that, all too often, becoming a coach just doesn't seem like a realistic aim for many young girls and women.
Secondly, female coaches often bring an entirely different approach to their work in comparison to their male counterparts.
Women have a different manner, a different way of tackling challenges and issues, a different way of communicating and, perhaps most importantly, a different (and better) understanding of female athletes.
Female athletes are not, in so many ways, the same as male athletes. Yet for male coaches, it is, understandably, extremely hard for them to tweak their approach accordingly because, to put it simply, they often just don't get it. To a lot of male coaches, an athlete is an athlete but female coaches have a greater understanding of how female athletes may need to be treated not more gently, but differently to male athletes.
Any progress with the representation of female coaches, particularly at elite level which is the most visible, must be celebrated. The Scotland women's football team had two high-profile and successful women at the helm in the shape of Anna Signeul between 2005 and 2017 and Shelly Kerr between 2017 and 2020. Male coaches then took over until, encouragingly, a female returned to the helm in the shape of Australian national, Melissa Andreatta, whose first game in charge was just over a week ago.
There's a similar picture in women's club football too, in which there's a number of female coaches, but plenty of men as well.
Individual sport, for some reason, seems to fare even worse when it comes to female coaches at elite level.
In Murray's sport of tennis, female coaches are an astonishingly rare sight, particularly in the men's game but they're remarkably uncommon in women's tennis too, and this is mirrored across many other individual sports.
There's a number of reasons for this.
Elite sport is not a working-from-home job. Working with an elite athlete means you have to go where they go and in the case of most athletes, that means trekking the globe for over half the year. In the case of tennis, it means globetrotting for eleven months of the year. For many women, particularly if they have children, this is just not a workable or an attractive proposition. In contrast, it's far more common, and far more accepted, for men to leave their family at home for months at time while they travel the world as an elite-level coach.
And there's the ingrained gender-bias or, in the worst cases, misogyny, which means women remain undervalued and underestimated as coaches.
The decades-long dominance of men in the coaching sphere has resulted in women's potential value being totally underestimated, with the assumption being commonplace that men just make better coaches. This is absolutely and definitively not true, but it remains a pervading belief throughout many areas of sport.
I'm optimistic that the number of female coaches both at grassroots and at elite level can improve. The progress made by women's sport in recent years is surely an indicator of what can be done. But progress won't happen overnight, nor will it happen without a concerted effort to change things.
Murray's programme will, I hope, bear some fruit within Scotland because it's not only female athletes who would benefit from more female coaches, it's sport as a whole.
AND ANOTHER THING…
The news that Scotland women's rugby team will play at Murrayfield for their Six Nations match against England next year is thrilling news.
The Scotland women's team has made impressive progress in recent seasons and playing at Murrayfield, where they're expected to attract a record-breaking crowd, is deserved reward.
(Image: MOLLY DARLINGTON/ GETTY IMAGES) While the current home to the women's national team, Hive Stadium, has been an excellent venue, there's indisputably something different about playing at the national stadium, and it gives the women's game the extra kudos that comes with playing at the sport's national stadium.
This is a significant step forward for women's rugby in Scotland, and now it's in the players hands to make the most of it with a good perforce against England next April.

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EXCLUSIVE Judy Murray accuses Scottish government of failing to make sport a priority in schools ... and fears it's becoming increasingly for the 'haves' rather than 'have nots'
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Judy Murray has accused the Scottish government of continuing to fail sport in this country, revealing her fears that it is becoming a two-tier system of the 'haves' and 'have nots' in schools. The mother of tennis legends Andy and Jamie also claims that, despite multiple warnings, Scotland has failed to build on her sons' legacy. Judy told Mail Sport that she believes children are missing out because of a lack of opportunities to pursue sport in schools and the costs involved for parents - and is adamant this will have an impact on Olympic talents of the future. 'I've always felt schools are the place for children to try out any number of things, particularly in sport,' she said. 'School team sports were always the first stepping stone for me in terms of what could become a pathway through sport - at whatever level. 'It's very sad that nowadays there are so few schools that are able to offer team sport and that are able to have decent quality PE sessions within their curriculum. Where do you get started now? Judy was a key player in son Andy becoming Wimbledon champion for the first time in 2013 'The onus now is on parents to find sports clubs which obviously have to be researched, paid for and so on. I feel like sport is becoming more about the 'haves' and much less about the 'have-nots'. 'I feel very strongly about sport, but sadly it doesn't appear to be a priority for this government. 'You then ask yourself: 'Where do your Olympians get started'? Most of them across all Olympic sports, apart from those that require expensive equipment, start off in schools. 'Their love of sport is often fostered by the first teacher who spots their talent and points them in the direction of a local sports club. I've heard that so many times. 'If school sport is not prioritised or not given the value, or opportunities are not created through the school curriculum, how do we get kids started on whatever pathway? How do we even spot the talent?' Judy - who has now created 'Learn To Lead', a new leadership and empowerment programme for girls in primary school - has long been critical of the lack of access to indoor tennis courts in Scotland, which allow people to play tennis all year round. She told Mail Sport she remained 'disappointed' that the country appears not to have 'taken advantage' of her sons' period of success - and maintained that the volume of players now coming through the ranks was 'very tough to swallow'. 'I will always be disappointed Scotland didn't take advantage of the huge opportunity they had for many years when Jamie and Andy were at the top of the world game,' said Judy. 'They were both Grand Slam champions, they were both world No 1s. They were front page and back page news. 'Their success developed an enormous fan base for tennis in Scotland because the country had two of its own to follow in the major events. With all that going on, we should have been able to take that profile and that fan engagement and bring in sponsors and create opportunities with programmes and facilities. 'What I tried to do when the boys were at the top of the game was (set up) my own 'Tennis On The Road' programme, and my own foundation. 'Tennis On The Road was about taking tennis into rural and disadvantaged areas across Scotland and building workforces around parents and volunteers. 'It was investing in adults to grow the game, but it was also very much about showing them what space they had, what courts they had, and making it accessible and affordable in those areas. Taking it into places where tennis didn't exist or where there was limited activity. It was Murray's sheer dedication as a young parent that helped her boys Jamie and Andy get on the ladder to enormous success 'That was a huge, huge part of what I did, the length and breadth of the country. 'It wasn't for me to build facilities or put courts in schools - that's more down to governing bodies - but I think there has been very little increase in the way of indoor facilities since the boys started in 2006. 'You still have huge gaps and big cities that have nothing - like Perth, Dundee, Inverness, and so on. Even with the best of intentions, if you identified some potentially great talented kids in Inverness, who's going to teach them? 'If you don't have indoor facilities, people can't earn a living from coaching tennis, because you can't coach all year round, the weather is too bad through the winter months. It will continue to disappoint me, the lack of progress. It has been really disappointing.' Tennis Scotland, meanwhile, insisted that 'more courts than ever' were now being created across Scotland. A spokesperson told Mail Sport: 'We now have 151 indoor courts in Scotland - including five currently under construction - which is 39 more since Sir Andy Murray won Wimbledon in 2016. 'Talks are ongoing with various partners over more indoor centres, which we hope to announce soon. 'In the past three years, we have also refurbished 163 public courts in parks around Scotland, at a cost of £2.5million in partnership with the LTA and UK Government.'

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Judy Murray is smiling broadly but, really, she could be forgiven for saying: 'To hell with it'. All around her, girls from a host of different primary schools are listening intently as she talks through her new initiative, Learn to Lead. It's an innovative, yet simple concept, with P6 and P7 girls running lunchtime or after-school tennis clubs for girls aged 4-9 years old. Designed to inspire leadership and empowerment, the move was borne out of Judy's desire to keep girls playing sport. With 1.3million teenage girls now dropping out of exercise altogether (according to research conducted by Women in Sport), it's a timely manoeuvre. That she is still fighting the good fight is remarkable. Judy is nothing if not tenacious and there is something within her that refuses to bow to failure. Murray says she will always be disappointed that her Park of Keir project to build on her sons' legacy never came to fruition This is reminiscent of her sons Andy and Jamie, who battled to victory after victory against the odds across the world. Undoubtedly, it has been an emotional year for the entire Murray family. The demise of Judy's Park of Keir project, in particular, was a massive blow. Construction was eventually pulled due to spiralling costs and 'protracted discussions' with authorities. How does she feel about it now? 'I won't do it again,' she says softly. 'That was 11 years of my life, planning that. And money. I put a significant financial input into that and, at the end of the day, we had to pull the plug on it. 'Really, it should never have been up to me to build a centre of national significance for Scotland. 'When I started that project, I just wanted somewhere to work. I wish I'd just built a barn and worked in it myself. 'It sort of grew arms and legs, because it was a partnership with the LTA and the Scottish Government through sportscotland. 'They wanted a centre of national significance. So, of course, it grew in scale to meet their demands.' The £20million facility, inspired by Andy and Jamie, was intended to provide affordable access to leisure for thousands of people of all ages and abilities - growing the sports of tennis, pickleball and padel by creating an accessible, community-focused centre. It was to be run by Judy's charitable trust, the Murray Play Foundation. Significant increases in costs, a lengthy and uncertain planning process, and protracted discussions with governing bodies eventually became too much - with a funding gap of more than £5m needing to be filled for the project to go ahead and no guarantee the next tranche of planning proposals would ever be approved. Judy with Andy in New York after his first Grand Slam success at the US Open in 2012 Scrapping it was hailed as a victory for campaigners who had rallied against building on the land near Dunblane but the inability to create a lasting legacy to Judy's sons garnered widespread criticism within tennis. On social media, Andy simply responded: 'No surprise', while his former coach Mark Petchey lamented 'an opportunity missed'. When John Swinney was asked by Mail Sport if he felt it was an embarrassment to Scotland there is no tangible legacy for Andy Murray - someone he had hailed as 'Scotland's greatest ever sportsman' - the First Minister claimed the opportunity to do so was still very much there. He said it 'must be informed by Andy Murray and the Murray Play Foundation' and insisted he would be keen to have an 'open conversation' about future plans. Whether those discussions ever materialise is unclear, with Judy ruling herself out of another project of that ilk. Andy's retirement, meanwhile, leaves the clock ticking ever louder. Tennis membership in Scotland may be up but, at elite level, questions remain over the pathway for players. 'I was working in Greece recently,' says Judy. 'They've had two top-ten players in Stefanos Tsitsipas and Maria Sakkari. 'Greece was never a hotbed of tennis. It's unbelievable what they've got now because their government and governing body got behind it and said: 'Let's strike while the iron is hot'. 'There will likely be no Scots in the Wimbledon juniors this year. And that disappoints me as well, because we should have oodles of young kids playing at a good level off the back of Jamie and Andy. 'To make it all work you need a lot of them at a young age. You can't just hothouse one or two and hope that works. You need volume, otherwise they have to leave the country to find the right training programmes and coaches. I still find that very tough to swallow.' Judy remains concerned by Scotland's inability to capitalise on the moment. The LTA say entries and wild cards for this year's Wimbledon have not yet been decided so it is too early to tell how many Scots might be involved, while Tennis Scotland deny was a dearth of talent coming through the junior ranks. While Judy concedes there has been some progress on providing indoor facilities, she insists more still needs to be done in under-served communities. 'You still have huge gaps and big cities that have nothing - like Perth, Dundee, Inverness, and so on. 'Even with the best of intentions, if you identified some potentially great talented kids in Inverness - who's going to teach them? If you don't have indoor facilities, people can't earn a living from coaching tennis because you can't coach all year round, the weather is too bad through the winter months. It will continue to disappoint me, the lack of progress.' On a positive note, the rise of Scot Jacob Fearnley is something to be celebrated. The 23-year-old, says Judy, has made 'huge, huge strides over the last ten months' and is an 'exciting' talent. Currently world No 49 he burst on to the scene at Wimbledon last year, recording his first major win over Alejandro Moro Canas before losing in four sets to Novak Djokovic in the second round. 'He went to an American university,' says Judy. 'And that gave him the opportunity to grow up and grow out. It gave him a great education, but it also gave him great training and competitive opportunities in a team environment, which is brilliant. 'It's very, very hard to come out of school and go straight on to the tour and be successful. So, actually, it was a perfect training ground for him. 'Prior to that, he was at Merchiston School, which has three indoor courts in Edinburgh and a tennis academy which does great things on three indoor courts. These were his two training grounds and, between them, they did an amazing job. 'He's got a rocket of a forehand, and he's just improving week in, week out. He's taking the experiences of the wins and the losses, and he's learning from them. It's exciting to see. 'The other one who did well in the juniors last year was Charlie Robertson. He made top 10 in the ITF (International Tennis Federation) end of year rankings, which was good, and is now at an American university as well.' And what's next for Judy? It's difficult to see her ever giving in, despite all the hurdles she has faced. 'I might still build a barn,' she laughs. 'But it will be one barn, and it will be my barn.'

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