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Lizzie Deignan latest to speak about experiences of sexism in cycling

Joanna Rowsell Shand says she didn’t contribute to independent review after getting impression they only wanted to hear from people “if they had something to report”

Lizzie Deignan has spoken about her experiences of sexism in cycling, which include her British Cycling coach not being there when she became world champion in 2015 after prioritising the men’s junior team.

Speaking to the Guardian ahead of the release of her autobiography – written as Lizzie Armitstead with the newspaper’s William Fotheringham – Deignan said of Brian Stephens’ absence: “I was really disappointed, because I’d done everything right going into that competition, and I just needed them to get it right for me on the day. And they didn’t. There was a lack of leadership. They let me down big time.”

Deignan also describes being “left with no choice” but to dance with a male team-mate for his birthday after being woken up at 11.30pm by a senior manager when riding for the Cervelo team.

Just 19 at the time, she says she was the only woman there, and after taking part in a Nintendo Wii dance competition while other male riders sat on bar stools and watched, she said she felt confused and foolish, but didn’t know why.

“It was only later, when I really thought about it, I thought, ‘No, that wasn’t a laugh’.”

However, Deignan points to differences in pay and prize money as having been the major inequality throughout her career. “My prize money for winning the 2015 world championship was £2,000, and the men’s was £20,000,” she said. “But the good thing from that is this year it changed. We have equal money.”

Deignan’s comments about British Cycling echo those made earlier in the year by former Olympic champion Nicole Cooke, who said that the sport was run "by men, for men."

Giving evidence to the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, Cooke said it was for this reason that the then British Women’s Road Team Coach, Simon Cope, abandoned his formal duties to spend four days delivering the infamous Jiffy bag to Team Sky at the 2011 Critérium du Dauphiné.

In contrast, the recently-retired double Olympic champion, Joanna Rowsell Shand, this week defended British Cycling, telling the Times that she never personally experienced any sexism during her 10-year career.

"I've come through the whole system and won two Olympic gold medals and I wouldn't have been able to do that if I'd experienced sexism.

"I didn't fear British Cycling. I accepted the commitment that was needed... and dedicated a decade of my life to it. I came out with some good results and I'm glad I did it.

"British Cycling is not perfect and people's complaints need to be addressed, but they have done a lot of good."

Rowsell Shand also said she regretted not giving her opinion when invited to contribute to UK Sport's independent review.

"In terms of the review, I was sent an email in June last year, less than two months out from the Olympics... I was very focused on Rio and didn't realise how important the review would become.

"In hindsight, I should have offered an opinion, which would have provided some balance. I had the impression from the email that they only wanted to hear from people if they had something to report."

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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Velovoyeur | 7 years ago
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BC receives a lot of funding from UK Sport and Sport England to promote "inspiration to participation" through success at elite level. This funding comes with caveats and is driven by winning Olympic medals. Therefore, the organisation has, possibly unwittingly, focussed efforts where success is most likely. Hence the huge success on the track which translated to the road. Without the medals gained in Sydney (2000), Athens (2004), Beijing (2008) and London 2012 BC would have not recieved the increasing amount of funds from the government. Some of this has been employed to promote other parts of cycle sport and BC is endeavouring to be an all encompassing governing body but cannot loose focus on what it's paymasters expect.

When talking about what BC does or does not do, the motivations behind this are partially formed by the organisation meeting the criteria necessary for the state funding it receives. Therefore, it has a dilemma - do something for all areas of cyclesport but not get the expected number of medals or concentrate on getting medals and then get more funds. There are other factors that affect how sport is shaped in the UK.

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davel | 7 years ago
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It isn't just women's cycling.

There might not be a campaign of discrimination - but it's the flipside of biases. It's men interested in road and track prioritising men's road and track. Oceandweller mentioned MTB; there're examples of relatively shoddy treatment of BMX too.

Your points about popularity and market forces only go so far with BC because it takes public money and has a mission to extend and support all forms of cycling for all. It can't justify biases because it isn't a commercial enterprise and has allowed its relationship with Sky to get way too muddy (see the recent difficulty in unpicking roles and remits for the Commons evidence).

I'm not really a fan of 'positive discrimination' but maybe if BC wasn't full of men who liked road and track and there was a clear distinction between people doing paid work for BC and those doing the same for Sky... (of course it's possible that this is all being straightened out now, but the recent changes in BC 'leadership' seem to be marketing wonks).

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oceandweller | 7 years ago
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Speaking as a (male) BC member, yes, the organisation's attitudes need updating. In addition to the rather evident male chauvinism, I'd say the organisation appears to have a narrow road 'n' track centred worldview.

For one thing, there seems little understanding of, or enthusiasm for, mountain biking.

OK, BC has a historic & public focus on road & track racing, but it's also seen by the UCI as the national body for mountain biking, a role it very largely ignores. That was brought home only too clearly before the Rio Olympics, when it was only through the UCI that we saw any GB riders in the XC race at all, not from any efforts by BC. If BC can't (or doesn't feel inclined to) treat mountain biking fairly it should ask some other organisation to take over liason with the UCI.

The attitude to mountain biking is bad enough but the fact BC appears to ignore utility cycling altogether is inexcusable. Why isn't BC joining Cycling UK in campaigning for better cycling infrastructure?

I believe in BC & certainly don't want to see the organisation damaged. But I'd also like to see it change & grow to be more inclusive.

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Nick T | 7 years ago
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Let's all jump on Rowsell for not having anything juicy to say about how terrible BC is and pick a couple of words without any context to prove she's part of the cabal

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Velovoyeur | 7 years ago
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There is no denying that there are things that need addressing at BC but they are not responsible for all of the problems in cycling. Mentioning the prize money at world championships in an article about BC is somewhat unfair. It is the UCI not BC who set these. At the moment the media seem to hold BC responsible for everything that isn't right in cycling. The sport is changing and we are going forwards. There will be situations that come to light and highlight what needs to be changed. This is always going to happen. The options are to make the change and know that we have made things better for future participants of our sport or constantly use the media to knock our sport and deter future participants. Cycling is progressing and improving - comparison with the way it was shows this as confirmed in this article.

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Paul J | 7 years ago
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I heard Rowsell interviewed once, where she described herself as a "native briton", which made me wonder a bit about her...

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Colin Peyresourde replied to Paul J | 7 years ago
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Paul J wrote:

I heard Rowsell interviewed once, where she described herself as a "native briton", which made me wonder a bit about her...

what? That she's a racist? And now that she doesn't back up your views on BC that solidifies your prejudices. How wonderfully judgemental of you.

This article is full of slack insinuations but little evidence of wrong doings. It's just moaning and quite frankly cheap shots.

Rowsell-Shand's experience may well be very different from Deignan's. She has certainly been mixing in a different part of the BC set, including Wiggle Honda, which may well be different. Who are we to say different.

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davel replied to Colin Peyresourde | 7 years ago
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Colin Peyresourde wrote:

This article is full of slack insinuations but little evidence of wrong doings. It's just moaning and quite frankly cheap shots.

In approximately 100 words from Deignan we have easily verifiable (or refutable) examples of BC prioritising men's junior events over women's senior world champs, and the prize money for women being 10 times less than the men's.

Do those examples not count as 1. evidence of 2. discrimination to you?

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Colin Peyresourde replied to davel | 7 years ago
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davel wrote:
Colin Peyresourde wrote:

This article is full of slack insinuations but little evidence of wrong doings. It's just moaning and quite frankly cheap shots.

In approximately 100 words from Deignan we have easily verifiable (or refutable) examples of BC prioritising men's junior events over women's senior world champs, and the prize money for women being 10 times less than the men's. Do those examples not count as 1. evidence of 2. discrimination to you?

1. The prize money is not BCs fault. That's the UCI - slack

2. We have Deignan's (reliable) word for the 'prioritising' over the women's event. He may have seen himself being spread thinly and applied himself where he could. On the basis that she won, he can't have 'let her down' too badly. He may have considered her to be in good shape to win and saw that he was needed at the junior event - so slack/one-sided.

So while I think that there maybe some inherent biases in the structure of cycling towards the men's cycling, I don't think discrimination is the right word. If women's cycling had the same level of people following the professional level then they would likely have more money to throw at them, but they don't. Market forces usually dictate the prize money, but here you have the governing body making a special case. You can argue about subsidising the women's races until they establish it as a bigger and more commercial operation, but all the work in recent years has not really see it make the mark it needs.

But this conflation of the argument over whether true discrimination has occurred in BC, into whether there is discrimination between men's and women's sports is not BCs fault, but Deignan seems to be happy to use it to her advantage.

Perhaps if she made claims about sexist language or inappropriate contact then I think there is a problem. What I don't see happening is someone coming forth, old or new, saying we need to take women's cycling at BC  in a new direction, just a lot of moaning and recriminations being played out in public.

i think BC could work with someone who actively has a vision. Things won't change by themselves, and making their leadership an embattled place is hardly helping.

It's also apparent that the focus has been on the men as the men's success has driven things on. Most people didn't know too much about cycling till Sky came along. As a result of Wiggins and Froome cycling in the U.K. has taken off. Despite the best efforts, Wiggle Honda has not had the same impact. Though women's cycling is growing. This wil likely mean that down the road more resources and funding may be available.

 

 

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Ush | 7 years ago
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Joanna Rowsell Shand managed to slip a sly little dig in there:  "I accepted the commitment that was needed... and dedicated a decade of my life to it."   Sort of taints the rest of what she says as bitter and unreliable.

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