Thursday , November 7 2024

Britain flexes sporting ‘superpower’ muscle

Britain's Mo Farah celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the Men's 10,000m during the athletics event at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on August 13, 2016. / AFP PHOTO / OLIVIER MORIN
Mo Farah celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win gold for Britain.

The British government and lottery fund has spent hundreds of millions of pounds on sporting success in the past two decades. And it has paid off.

London, United Kingdom | AFP |

Twenty years after a stinging Olympic failure, Britain has risen from the ashes to become a sporting “superpower” typified by the exploits of cycling lovebirds Jason Kenny and Laura Trott.

Kenny won three golds in Rio to take his career total to six. His partner Trott won two to double her total from two Olympics.

Rival nations have been left confounded by Team GB’s cool performance with 27 golds out of 67 won in Rio which gave them second place in the medals table behind the United States.

But rather than revolutionary coaching or technology, it is the National Lottery Fund and good old taxpayer’s cash that has paid off handsomely.

The government and lottery fund has spent hundreds of millions of pounds on sporting success in the past two decades. And it has paid off.

Medals table 2

UK Sport chief executive Liz Nicholl declared Sunday: “We are one of those sporting superpowers now.”

It was “spectacular” to be ahead of China in the rankings thanks to the likes of distance runner Mo Farah, Andy Murray in tennis, Justin Rose in golf, boxer Nicola Adams, Trott and Kenny, Max Whitlock and Britain’s first ever women’s hockey champions.

Britain’s Daily Mirror newspaper called it “Britain’s golden age”. Several papers called for a knighthood for the Somali-born Farah.

UK Sport chairman Rod Carr, a British yachting coach at three Olympics, sees the origin of today’s success in a failure at the 1996 Games in Atlanta when he was team manager. Britain won a single gold.

“The reality was at the time of Atlanta John Major (prime minister at the time) was kicking the whole lottery act through parliament and we were doing the best we could,” Carr told AFP in an interview.

“However, a year later I could see that we had a basis for building success. We (yachting) had to write a plan for the future so I remember sweating over that.

“We got two silvers in Atlanta and some top 10 results and in Sydney we got three golds and two silvers.

“We massively improved over that period and other sports did as well.”

According to British media estimates, the government spent just £5m ($7 million) per year funding Olympic sport before the 1996 Atlanta Games.

That increased to more than £50 million in the four years before the 2000 Games where Britain won 28 medals.

Before London 2012 it was spending more than £80 million a year and Team GB won 65 medals and came third in the table.

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Carr said some of the success in Rio “is down to the legacy of the London Games”.

“Having a home Games definitely propelled everybody more into the public eye than before the Olympics and the Paralympics.

“Some athletes who might have considered retiring from sport stayed on for another Games.”

He said Major deserved a lot of the credit for the revolution.

“Well in the late 90s it would have been a bit of an act of faith, but by the early 2000s it was pretty obvious there was a linear relationship between medals and funding.”

 

 Lifting the mood 

The benefit extends beyond sport.

Team GB has become “a major unifying factor” after the political storm caused by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, Carr said.

“It can lift the national mood and you can see that from reading the press coverage.”

However, UK Sports has come under fire for restricting funding to sports that produce medals — leaving some like basketball, popular among inner city youth, out in the cold.

Carr, noting that sport funding “does not expand because of success,” said UK Sports could not fund every project.

Taxpayer money is fixed by the government and lottery funding depends on how many people gamble.

“We take a cautious approach because funding is unlikely to go up,” he said.

“That means that to put sports on the system that we might like for other reasons, that maybe are socially inclusive, for want of a better word, we have to then deduct money from sports that are medalling.

“That makes for very hard decisions and which can be controversial but our remit from the government is to win medals, no one has said our goal is social inclusion.

“Our remit is to create heroes and heroines in Olympics and Paralympics which we’ve done pretty well.”

 

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