Sportswomen are struggling to get corporate sponsorship unless they are blonde, blue-eyed and feminine, according to players and administrators.
The idea that women are being judged on their appearance is not new, but when it comes to women in sport it can be the difference between making it big or having to work casual shifts on the side.
Australian cricketer and soccer player Ellyse Perry says, “When you look at the sponsorship of athletes in sport the majority goes to male athletes because they’re more visible and public – the public is a lot more exposed to them.”
As women fight for television exposure (after the ABC budget cuts) and for bigger audience numbers to attend their games, they are also fighting to seek corporate funding based on their sporting skill rather than whether they fit a particular aesthetic ideal.
“When you look at female athletes and look at the level of sponsorship, you see that there’s a lot less because [women] they aren’t as visible and people aren’t as aware of them so I think looks do come in to it a bit more,” Ms Perry says.
Men don’t need to be good-looking to get corporate sponsorship – they are judged on their sporting skills. But for women, it’s very different.
“It’s not just about their athletic ability, it’s about how marketable they are from an aesthetic point of view. This doesn’t happen as much in male sport because they’re in the public eye a lot more,” she says.
Secretary of Australian Womensport and Recreation Association, Janice Crosswhite says that women are at a distinct disadvantage, especially if they don’t look a particular way.
Top Comments
Many men still are of the opinion that men are better at sports than women. In a way it's 'true'... There isn't one sport where men can't run faster, jump higher, do more twists or flips than women. This is because men and women are different and when you put bith sexes on the same playing field men will win every time. Sadly this is the reason why men feel women don't deserve the same amount of exposure, funding or sponsorship as men.
I have a daughter and it breaks my heart that this is the world I'm sending her out into.
So play sport for fun, fitness and the challenge it provides, much like the other 99.999% of us do at our suburban venues and grounds, men and women included.
And 'men' don't decide what is worth telecasting or sponsoring. Viewer participation, ratings and dollars are the key criteria, so there is no need to make it a sexist argument.
I think we also have to face up to one fact which women don't want to face. That many women prefer to watch men's sports. I don't watch much sport on TV, but most of the women I know enjoy men's football, men's cricket, men's tennis, men's basketball. If you mention the netball to them they practically gag. It's no good moaning and groaning about women's sport not getting its due, until you can convince more women to watch it and therefore provide revenue for sponsors. It's always been about the money, even if the sponsors believe it's about blonde and beautiful.