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British Cycling ‘run by men, for men’ according to Nicole Cooke

Organisation says it is “absolutely committed to resolving the historic gender imbalance in our sport”

Former Olympic champion Nicole Cooke says that cycling is a sport run "by men, for men," and adds that attempts to combat doping are best characterised as “the wrong people fighting the wrong war, in the wrong way, with the wrong tools.”

Cooke was not expected to pull her punches when giving evidence to the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, and her written evidence, submitted to accompany a question and answer session earlier today, was as strongly worded as expected.

The heart of her criticism is her claim that the management at British Cycling (BC) “are answerable only to themselves.”

She believes this is how a situation could arise where the then British Women’s Road Team Coach, Simon Cope, abandoned his formal duties to spend four days delivering a Jiffy bag to Team Sky at the 2011 Critérium du Dauphiné.

Cooke says that Cope could be directed to do this because those affected had no-one to appeal to.

“The Director of the BC cycling performance program, Sir Dave Brailsford, and the National Coach, Shane Sutton, are both working for Team Sky in management roles as well as their public roles and can misdirect because they know that they have the approval to do so from the two cycling representatives on the Board of the Team Sky holding company, Tour Racing Limited, Ian Drake and Brian Cookson who were respectively CEO of and President of The Executive Board British Cycling throughout this period.”

Brian Cookson now heads cycling’s world governing body, the UCI, while Ian Drake recently stood down from his position as British Cycling CEO.

Drake had been due to leave in April and according to the organisation his early departure was because he had completed handover of his duties. However, it was also noted by some that he left during the week in which British Cycling received a copy of UK Sport’s report into the climate and culture within its World Class Programme.

However, Cooke clearly doesn’t hold UK Sport in especially high regard either, writing: “Throughout my whole career, BC senior management and the Board could not have made it more clear to those they directed, that men and the actions and achievements of men, were all that mattered. This was obvious to all observers of the sport but UK Sport just stood by, watched and approved.”

In a statement, British Cycling said:

“While there is still a way to go, British Cycling is absolutely committed to resolving the historic gender imbalance in our sport.

“Our ambition – launched in 2013 – to get one million more women cycling by 2020 has led to widespread changes across the sport at all levels including a 70% increase in the number of female coaches, the creation of Britain's first ever international level stage race in the Women's Tour, the continued growth of our female-only rides programme, Breeze, and British Cycling's female membership surpassing 20,000 members less than 10 years after the organisation’s total membership was less than that.

“Just this week, we announced equal prize money for the elite road series as part of our ongoing aim of gender parity across all aspects and disciplines of the sport. The Great Britain Cycling Team is also making significant strides. Since 2013, we have established a women's under-23 academy, a women's road team training base in Belgium and we are close to a 50:50 male/female ratio in terms of riders on the World Class Programme. British Cycling is also proud of the record of our elite women – at London 2012, the first Games to feature parity for the genders in cycling, and Rio 2016 they won a combined 28 medals. More than that, they are inspiring huge numbers of men and women to get active by getting on their bikes.

“There is always more that can be done and we strive to make continual improvements to ensure that cycling is reaching out to women and girls of all ages and abilities. And, with the media recently moving to increase coverage of women’s sport, we believe these improvements will accelerate.”

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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8 comments

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keirik | 7 years ago
1 like

as I commented on the other thread:

 

“I don’t have the medical knowledge to make an informed decision of the medical side of it.”

But she went and cast aspertions without any evidence anyway.

 

I used to like her and thought she was an awesome racer, but she needs to deal with that chip on her shoulder

 

Avatar
freebsd_frank replied to keirik | 7 years ago
2 likes

keirik wrote:

as I commented on the other thread:

“I don’t have the medical knowledge to make an informed decision of the medical side of it.”

But she went and cast aspertions without any evidence anyway.

She cast aspertions but with plenty of evidence contrary to your assertion.

Wiggins was given injections of a performance enhancing drug prior to big events. Fact.

They were given and signed off as TUEs by a doctor who had a financial interest in Sir Brad performing well.

It only came to light some years after the event and only as a result of a hack. If that hadn't happened we'd still be in the dark.

I can tell you now: no doctor in the country will inject you with a steroid that is not indicated for asthma to treat your "exercise induced asthma" before you've even fucking exercised....unless of course, you pay them sufficient amounts of cash.

Let's come to the mysterious "package".

I've done a fair bit of travelling in my time and what you never do is carry a package across a border without knowing exactly what is in it. It does not matter who gives it to you.

Yet Sir Brad, Sir David, their mule and BC have testified that they had no idea what was in that package even though they went through significant effort to deliver it to Sir Brad in France.

Quote:

I used to like her and thought she was an awesome racer, but she needs to deal with that chip on her shoulder

I'll cast an aspertion your way:

You've got shit for brains.

 

Avatar
Jimmy Ray Will | 7 years ago
4 likes

In a perfect world... I'd love to race my bike... like all the time, as a job. And earn loads of cash doing it.

It would be fab.

Alas, I'm not good enough, so I have a real job and I play bikes when I can.

Only the very best riders, get to live the dream.

There are far more chaps watching, dreaming and coming up short than there are making it.

What the hell has this got to do with anything...

Well, as a percentage of all racing dreamers, I believe the number of women living that dream is at least as high, if not higher than men.

We talk of sexism, and pull deep frowns at men, horrid men, but the truth is more often than not, we are not comparing apples with apples.

To me this isn't so much about sexism, it's about developing women's sport. You can sit hear and argue historic points all you like, but the answer is moving forward not bickering about past indiscretions. Only 200 years ago we thought slavery was OK. There are many dynasties thriving today that were built on the back of slavery... however no one is calling for their blood today.

The answer is creating more, better races, better coverage, better marketing... build the top end of women's cycling. Provide a platform to make some female stars... until there are female household names , there will be no big sponsorship deals. And until the money comes, there can be no parity.

Avatar
wycombewheeler | 7 years ago
0 likes

OK so this enquiry by MPs is into doping and the evidence offered is about gender inequality?

Personally I'd rather they were speniding time looking into sexism in publicly funded sport, or even better safety on the roads, because fundamentally I don't care enough about doping to have MPs wasting public money investigating it.

Avatar
freebsd_frank replied to wycombewheeler | 7 years ago
4 likes

wycombewheeler wrote:

OK so this enquiry by MPs is into doping and the evidence offered is about gender inequality?

They can't enquire into everything that is wretched, rotten and corrupt with professional sport in this country. If they did, they'd be interrupted by the heat death of the universe before half the evidence had been presented.

Quote:

Personally I'd rather they were speniding time looking into sexism in publicly funded sport, or even better safety on the roads, because fundamentally I don't care enough about doping to have MPs wasting public money investigating it.

So it's OK that the government should carry on bunging large sums of public money (and honours) at a bunch of dopers who wouldn't know what "fair-play" was if it hit them on the head? Gotcha.

Nicole Cooke's written evidence is worth reading:

http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidence...

Read it and weep. That the greatest British cyclist since Beryl Burton (yes, another woman) was treated in such a fashion is a disgrace.

British Cycling and UK Sport and all whom work for them need firmly kicking into touch. They're not just part of the problem....they ARE the problem.

 

 

 

Avatar
OldRidgeback | 7 years ago
2 likes

BC, run by white men, for white men.

It's not just the attitude to female rider within BC that comes into question.

Perhaps ironically after posting that comment, I have to renew my BC membership.

Avatar
riotgibbon | 7 years ago
8 likes

Nicole Cooke's is the best book on cycling I've ever read. She describes a situation whereby a voluntary organisation run as a mens club suddenly became a lottery funded organisation run as a boys club. Yes, she (and her dad) probably very are stroppy, I've no idea, but she was a world and olympic champion, goes with the turf. If she had the good sense to be born male, then she would no doubt be a much loved national "character",  but alas, she's a woman. When I was reading the book, I was talking to a coach at my lad's club about it, and he said "yeah, chip on her shoulder, that one"

says it all.   If that Cope was swanning off after Wiggins when he should have been doing the job he was being paid with public money to do, then that's pretty disgraceful. But not surprising ,...

 

Avatar
Simon E replied to riotgibbon | 7 years ago
9 likes

riotgibbon wrote:

"yeah, chip on her shoulder, that one"

says it all.   If that Cope was swanning off after Wiggins when he should have been doing the job he was being paid with public money to do, then that's pretty disgraceful. But not surprising ,...

Exactly.

Oh yes, Nicole is very outspoken and has strong opinions, but I have never seen a situation when those opinions were not backed up by good evidence.

I don't recall people standing up to argue a case with her either. And yes, her book is excellent.

You don't have to read much about women's cycle sport before you find out just how badly it is run, the overt sexism (and I'm not just talking about podium girls or titillating studio images, though that one is not as bad as some), the stories of DS abuse - verbal and otherwise - and exploiting the girls' desire to compete saddens me. It shows the sport in a pretty bad light. Perhaps that's why people like Nicole, who won't take it lying down, are villified or dismissed.

Hopefully things are changing, there is momentum and a desire to make it work, at least in some quarters. But we certainly need some harsh light shining into the dark corners.

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