“British Cycling is sexist” Cooke tells MPs
Former Olympic and
World Road Champion Nicole Cooke has told
the Parliamentary inquiry investigating “possible wrong doing” in British Cycling that
she is sceptical of Team Sky’s explanations for the contents of the Jiffy bag
and Wiggins use of TUEs allowing him the use of an otherwise banned drug.
But what shocked MPs
was her insistence that British Cycling is sexist, and has always provided a
disproportionate amount of support to men than to women.
In so saying, she has
re-ignited the embers of the fire British Cycling hoped they had doused last year,
when an investigation found ex-British Cycling technical director Shane Sutton guilty of using
sexist language towards Olympic team sprinter Jess Varnish.
And it begs the question, are the chickens at last coming home to roost?
For here is the great
irony. When Cooke fulfilled her dream
and carried off that historic gold medal in the 2008 Olympic road race at
Beijing she had done so in the absence of any cohesive plan for women’s road
racing.
And yet it was this performance which launched British Cycling on its famous medal
winning trajectory at that Olympic Games which has brought cycling £millions in
Lottery funding and £millions in Sky
sponsorship. It led to the creation of Team Sky but the there was no such deal for the women, despite the explosion in talent here in the UK
Even BC acknowledged
that Cook’s victory in Beijing was down to her own hard work, enterprise and training perfected over the
years, and had very little to do with British Cycling’s still evolving World
Class Performance Plan which was designed for and has underpinned the track team’s successes
this Millennium.
For whatever the
undoubted merits of the Plan - fashioned around the track because of the
greater medal winning opportunities to be had there than on the road - it was nevertheless
Cooke’s road victory at Beijing which provided the spark for the British track
team’s unprecedented gold medal haul which elevated British Cycling to number 1
UK Olympic sport.
When Cooke gifted
British Cycling with a unique double two months later by winning the world road
title, the national body once again bathed in reflected glory.
Now, here we are, more
than eight years on, and still women’s road cycling is the poor relation to the men’s.
Cooke’s claims reinforce
those already made by the current crop of British internationals - Olympic
medallists Lizzie Deignan and Emma Pooley who say the problems go all the way
up to the UCI.
Cooke has never been
afraid of expressing an opinion, never afraid to mince words with the national body or
fellow riders if something irked her. She
was dubbed “ Her Majesty” by her compatriots!
I recall this
self-assured immensely talented 15-year-old schools champion after her victory
in Milton Keynes confidently declare
her aim was to win the Olympic title one day.
She knew what she wanted.
She will tell you -
is reminding us now - she did it her way because the national body was always
more concerned with the men.
British Cycling insists
this has changed now. Now they have a strategy to encourage women in the sport.
And they report that
in the past seven years 254,000 women have taken up cycling.
British Cycling now
has 20,000 female members – up from 3000 in 2008.
They also have 1,100
female coaches.
This is all to the
good. But for grass roots to develop they need something to inspire them, which
was the story, fed Sky when they first backed British Cycling in 2008 and so
Team Sky was born.
British Cycling should
show some initiative and twist the arm of their new backers - the bank HSBC –
UK - and get them to put in a few £m by sponsoring a British professional
women’s road team the equal of the men’s outfit at Sky.
Until then they do
that, the Tour of Britain will remain the torch bearer in the struggle for equality
in women’s road cycling. They had the
foresight to introduce a women’s professional Tour of Britain in 2014.
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