Tuesday 9 December 2014

A Blueprint for a Triathlon Future



Triathlon has been bumbling along in Australia for the best part of 30 years. In that 30 years Australian athletes have won:
  • 19 Triathlon World Championships
  • 4 ITU Long Distance Triathlon World Championships
  • 8 Duathlon World Championships
  • 2 Aquathlon World Championships
  • 10 Ironman World Championships
  • 5 Ironman 70.3 World Championships
  • 1 Gold, 2 Silver and 1 Bronze Olympic Medals

Yet…unless you’ve reached peak triathlon geek (like I have) I doubt you knew that.

How about I run some names past you…Greg Welch, Michellie Jones, Emma Carney, Miles Stewart, Natalie Van Coevorden, Peter Robertson, Emma Snowsill, Emma Moffatt, Emma Jackson, Erin Densham, Loretta Harrop, Craig Alexander, Ashleigh Gentle, Aaron Royle, Felicity Abram, Liz Blatchford, Melissa Hauschildt, Pete Jacobs.

Let's make triathlon take-off...literally
Again unless you’re a triathlete you won’t know anything about the majority of them. You may have heard the names of some of the others in the mid to late 1990s but believe it or not every one of them has at a minimum a World Cup podium to their name; most of them are World Champions, some even have Olympic medals!

From that simple experiment we can reach a worrying conclusion…triathlon is pretty much invisible. Yes invisible and yet in 2013-14 more than 180,000 race starts were made by across the country by 20,500 registered athletes and many one-day license holders. How do we harness the power in those numbers for the good of the sport? How do we grow triathlon?

What is triathlon and what sort of people are triathletes?

If you ask the Collins English Dictionary the definition of triathlon reads:

triathlon

/traɪˈæθlɒn/
noun
1. an athletic contest in which each athlete competes in three different events: swimming, cycling, and running.

Yet if you ask any competitor it’s more than that. I conducted a quick social media survey the other day and I received a variety of answers:
  • I actually see it as one event containing three disciplines” –An accountant
  • “The chance to race, working in a team to compete a mission that includes being tethered and tortured together, lasting about an hour and 20 minutes. When the triathlon is over the team crosses the line for their victory banana! I say to myself why the hell did I participate in that pain? I have a yack then enter into another one” –A para-triathlete
  • “Great memories, great pics, great people and it's my babies sport so I just love it!!” – A triathlon mum and international competitor
  • “It's sport reflecting life. It can give all the joy in the world and can quickly and cruelly cut you down to size. It teaches you discipline, commitment and respect. You meet all sorts of people. It just happens in a shorter time period and you get to relive it time and again.” –Long Course international competitor
  • “It's the epitome of the agony and ecstasy, madness and insanity meeting clarity and exhilaration. It’s family spirit developing from the most eclectic bunch of individuals and an opportunity to continually challenge your limitations and grow and develop as an individual and part of a team... I may not race, but I love it” –Triathlon Mum
  • “Family, Friends and finish lines! There’s no better feeling than running up Finish Shute at Port Macquarie Ironman. When you hit the wall at 32kms on the run, friends and family racing against you and supporting you cheer you all the way across the line!! bring on the 3rd of May 2015” –Ironman competitor
  • “triathlon. n. Event for people who don't realise that one sport is hard enough” –Short course competitor.

And what about those competitors; who are they? In short triathletes represent probably the most diverse range of people competing in any sport in the country. They come from the city and the bush, the lower socio-economic areas to the wealthiest regions, from 5 years olds to 90 year olds, from brickies to pilots and nurses and doctors and everything in between. They come in all body shapes, have all manner of abilities and have, apart from a penchant for lycra, a shared love of a challenging sport.

In effect what we have is a mass participation sport with little to no public penetration. It’s invisible in the media and whilst everyone knows somebody who does triathlon few know what that actually entails.

It starts local

Grassroots sport. In NSW the sport is built around local not for profit clubs. They are the untapped resource to promote the sport. They hold their own local races (perfect opportunities to get acquainted with the sport for cheap), they train together, they provide a support network and they develop cross generational, cross gender and cross ethnic friendships.

I’ll talk about the NSW Club model in another post but I want to focus here on how at a grassroots level clubs can generate their own publicity.

Have a dedicated Publicity Officer

I believe every club should have a publicity officer. They don’t need to be Max Markson but they do need to have several skills. They must have a nose for a good story, they must have good story telling and writing skills and they need to be willing to put significant effort in. More importantly they need to be knowledgeable about the sport, approachable, contactable, convincing and aware of what’s going on in the club. It’s a very good idea for them to be on the committee too so that they can be fully abreast of your club situation.

Local Media-easy pickings


When was the last time you read something about triathlon in your local paper? Oh you didn’t? Why was that? Simply it’s because you didn’t put it there. Local newspapers are always looking for good stories to tell and you can fill their pages. Did you have a club race? Good…write a media release telling how many people came. Emphasise the number of children who competed. If you’ve got a particularly strong women’s programme, tell that story. Did you compete at the Club Championship? Write about the team work, it doesn’t have to be results success to be newsworthy.

If it seems easy that’s because it is. When I took over the Publicity Officer role for Macarthur Triathlon Club in 2010 I had a blank canvas. The first thing I did was ring the local newspapers and talk to the sports editors. I spoke to them and let them know who I was and a bit about the club. Once that initial connection had been made I put their direct email adresses on my media release list.

How do I know this? I made a success of it by trial and error. During 2013 I had 10 separate articles published by the Macarthur Advertiser plus a couple in the Macarthur Chronicle. This year I’ve run a few less stories but the past two weeks have seen Macarthur Triathlon Club featured twice in the Advertiser in two weeks in stories the newspaper journalists chased down themselves.

I can’t promise you that every story will get a run. It’s quite possible that your story may not be interesting enough or may get buried. The more time you spend doing it however, the quicker you’ll ascertain the times to avoid in your local community. As a general rule give football finals a wide berth and avoid Olympics or Commonwealth Games periods unless you have an athlete from your club competing in either. If you persist at it long enough you will get to the enviable situation where the local journalists start to come to you for stories. This is not the time to get complacent though, this is the time to build on your success.

Finally, if you have a photographer who comes along, ask them to help you. Media Releases are generally easier to sell with quality photos attached.

@macarthurtriclub in the Macarthur Advertiser this week. @triaustralia @triathlonnsw

A photo posted by Macarthur Triathlon Club (@macarthurtriclub) on


Social Media-are you social?

In the digital age social media is a major selling point for any organisation. I manage social media for Macarthur Triathlon Club across facebook, twitter and instagram. There are many methods of doing this; one colleague I spoke to in Queensland said that she posts different things for different days, e.g. random motivational stuff on Mondays. I don’t have a rigid technique to how I post on the club’s social media accounts but I do have some rules:
  • Don’t bombard daily. Occasionally you may need to post multiple things on a day, don’t do it on consecutive days.
  • Pictures stand out when people scroll through timelines. Use pictures where you can to make a point. Get your club members to send you photos and use them. Letting Instagram post to your facebook wall and twitter account kills three birds with one stone!
  • Do tag people where appropriate, especially frequent social media sharers and any elite/professional athletes you have in your club. I don’t allow a free for all on tagging to avoid potential cyber bullying.
  • Keep it professional; avoid using colloquialisms, nicknames or anything slightly controversial. You do not want to appear cliquey.
  • Rope in your most vocal social media users to comment, like and share. This ensures your message gets out. If you have one or two, others will follow.
  • Keep internal documents, emails and race reports internal!
  • Do share appropriate things from Triathlon Australia and your State/Territory Triathlon Association (STTA). Don’t share everything; most people who ‘like’ your club will probably have seen it anyway.
  • When people go away to race encourage them to send your social media admin photos, quotes and stories. These help to personalise your club and share the adventure amongst friends.
  • When people compete at World Championships follow their entire journey. Update their results, get in touch and get photos. Scour official social media to see if they pop up anywhere because World Championships are amazing events and you should share success.

Develop a two way relationship with your elite athlete

I have a separate blog post to come soon about how you should develop relationships with elite athletes but I’ll save that. Suffice to say, keep them close. Invite them to events. Write about their achievements in your media releases and on your social media. They can do as much for you as you can for them and writing about them often gets that initial foot in the door with the local media.

Keep friendly

The club’s committee needs to be personable and on the ground at club functions. Go out of your way to welcome new people; don’t leave them on the sideline. Follow up all electronic enquiries as soon as possible and ensure everyone knows what’s happening in your club. And, most importantly, hide your animosity. Nobody likes a grump so keep it to yourself and deal with grievances in private-well away from anybody else and well away from your social media!

Each state must pull its weight.

Beyond the local level there needs to be support from the STTAs. One of the fundamental tasks of the state association is to promote the sport as well as sanction events. Combine a diverse events calendar with a handful of friendly journalists and you can generate significant media exposure at little cost. The key to this though is having marketable events.

Building a network of friendly journalists

When the STTA organises an event it is their responsibility to organise and maximise the media exposure they can generate. This goes beyond a post race media release, this requires the STTA (which has paid employees) to be proactive. Talk to the sports editor at your capital city daily papers, specifically invite them along. Do the same with the television news. You may not succeed but it’s worth the try. Talk to the clubs in the local region of the race to find out who to contact in local media. If nothing else, comprehensive coverage in local media is some exposure for the sport.

On event day have a dedicated, friendly, knowledgeable and patient person to look after the media. That person must realise that the media probably doesn’t know anything about triathlon so explain the sport simply-always talk about the no crawling rule because it always gets a giggle. Take the media all around the race course and explain some of the challenges of each leg and transition. If you can, stick them on the back of a marshal’s motorbike so they get an idea how fast athletes are actually moving. Line up a cross section of competitors and make sure these people are introduced to the media to show the diversity of what it is you’re trying to sell.

Create stand alone State Championships

Each state should have stand alone state championships over Sprint, Olympic and Long Course as well as in Aquathlon and Duathlon. These races should not count toward any series points and should be independent. These races should be the focus of the state calendar and sanctioning should be refused for any other races on the appropriate weekends (including club races)

The aim of these events should be to capture as much of the competing population as possible so the same event should be scheduled for the same day in each state as happens with all the European countries and their national cycling championships. The events should also happen toward the end of the season so that elite athletes are in the country and in preparation before their international season. Combined with a requirement in high performance contracts to compete if the athlete wishes to be selected for any Australian team this will help bring star power.

Promoting Elite Athletes

This is not just the job of Triathlon Australia. Each STTA has a junior development programme and most states have at least one elite athlete supported by their State Institute of Sport or the National Talent Academy. What these athletes do matters. The STTA should be promoting these athletes in regular media releases to both the state-wide and the local press. The latter then reinforces the effort made by clubs.

National level

Triathlon Australia has under CEO Anne Gripper made significant improvements to its public image but still needs to do more and as the national federation there is plenty they should do. There was a time in the late 1990s when Triathlon was a major televised sport with a fast paced sprint series across the Eastern ‘J Curve’ sponsored by companies like St George and Kia. Regaining this sort of coverage should be a major aim for the organisation.

One of the unique aspects of our sport is the integration of events into the World Championship. The Triathlon World Championship is the only sporting event in the world where elite athletes, developing elites (juniors/under 23s), elite athletes with a disability and the world’s best amateur able bodied and disabled athletes compete for their respective title at the same time in the same place. Having been to the last three I’ve seen how special it makes the atmosphere, a team environment where elite athletes are as interested in your racing as you are in theirs! This is an idea we can hijack to our advantage in our national championships.

Each year we crown Australian champions, age-group and elite, in Aquathlon, Sprint Triathlon, Triathlon, Long Course Triathlon, Cross Triathlon and Duathlon. Do you know who any of the current champions are? I can tell you that Gillian Backhouse is the reigning champion in both draft legal triathlon distances and Jaz Hedgeland the junior champion but I haven’t got a clue who the others are. If I don’t know, how the hell is anybody else going to know?

One of the reasons is that the Australian championships are invisible! Did you know that the Australian Sprint Championship was buried in the midst of the Gatorade Series in Melbourne last season? The Olympic Distance championship was buried in the Oceania Championship in Devonport. This obviously doesn’t work so I have a plan based on my aforementioned suggestion for state championships.

Making National Championships the jewel in the crown

I believe that the best way to publicise our sport is to completely re-jig the way we run our National Championships. We need to capture a bit of that World Championship spirit, i.e. we need to bring all the areas of our sport together. We need our elite athletes, our para-triathletes and our age-groupers of all abilities together because there’s strength in numbers.

What follow is my suggestion based around the Australian Sprint Distance Triathlon Championship:
  • 7:30-12:00 Open Para/Age-Group Sprint Triathlon Championship
  • 12:15 Elite & Junior Women Sprint Triathlon Championship
  • 13:30 Elite Para-Triathlon Championship
  • 15:30 Elite & Junior Men Sprint Triathlon Championship
  • 12:00-17:00 Live TV Coverage
    • Introduction, sport explanation, course description
    • Women’s race live
    • Age-Group highlights including naming all Age-Group champions
    • Para-triathlon, slight delay
    • Men’s race live
    • Podiums and wrap up.
  • Compulsory elite license holder participation for selection in World Cup, World Championship, World Series races (with an extenuating circumstances policy)
  • Elite athletes to race in state colours with ITU compliant race suits with state code replacing AUS. Age-Group athletes encouraged to race in club suits. Elite athletes encouraged to wear club logo somewhere on their uniform.
  • Championship race to be a stand alone event.
  • Guaranteed World Championship selection for top 5 in all age-groups.
  • No clashing races anywhere in the country on the weekend of a National Championship

Share our pool of athletes

Many triathletes train with swim squads (MSA or SA), some race with Cycling Australia and others spend their spare income on athletics. Yet for many athletes with a love of several sports cost simply prevents them from getting involved with more than one. Triathlon Australia needs to have an arrangement with Athletics Australia, Little Athletics, Swimming Australia, Masters Swimming Australia and Cycling Australia for significant membership discounting. This works both ways-it provides an incentive to keep Triathlon Australia members because it reduces costs and the need to choose between sports and it also helps to provide a low cost opportunity to bring more athletes across to triathlon.

Continued integration of Para-triathlon

The way para-triathlon has been integrated into our sport is surpassing any global standard in para-sport. The fact that triathlon has evolved to have two levels, elite and open is something unheard of in most para-sport but there is more work to do.

There exists a little bit of tension between elite and open para-triathletes (this can be seen on social media). Triathlon Australia needs to ensure that everyone understands open para-triathlon athletes are age-groupers who happen to have a disability. Further to rectify this problem a transparent pathways to elite document needs to be published to allow open/age-group athletes a clear understanding of what the minimum criteria are for elite selection.

There remains (as in cycling) a problem with finding suitable guides for PT5 (vision impaired) athletes. Triathlon Australia needs to develop a pool of suitable guides and train them appropriately for elite competition and also ensure that there is a list of people willing to guide open competitors too.

Triathlon Australia needs to work with clubs to help them understand para-triathlon. Clubs need to be educated in how to work with disabled athletes and how to adapt their race procedures to suit these club members. I recommend a register of ‘Centre of Excellence’ clubs be developed for para-triathlon to give interested people a good place to start from. (A similar idea for junior athletes wouldn’t go astray either).

Finally, Triathlon Australia needs to develop a culture welcoming of ‘les autres’ athletes. There are many disabled people who would like to race triathlon but do not fit into one of the modified categories established in 2013. Obviously these athletes will be ineligible to compete internationally but there is nothing stopping Australia introducing a PT6 ‘les Autres’ category to domestic racing to allow those other willing participants an opportunity.

Renewing our approach to the relay

Like it or loathe it (and I’m headed more toward the latter than the former) the ITU is committed to the 4x Mixed Relay. As a Commonwealth Games event it has medals on the line and is therefore a part of the mix when it comes to medal performance funding from the Australian Sports Commission. The Australian teams have not finished in the World Championship medals since 2009 and with the strength of triathlon in Canada, England, Wales, New Zealand & South Africa there is no way we can guarantee a Commonwealth Games medal in current form either. If it’s an event we need to raise its profile.

My solution to this problem is three fold.
  1. Develop a programme that in pre-event camps can be utilised to get the team used to working together. Swimming and Athletics race relays all the time and there’s a lot that can be learnt from their training methods.
  2. Consider training a few super sprint athletes focussed on the relay distance and using them in major competitions.
  3. Introduce the 4x Mixed Relay to national, state and club events. By introducing an age requirement it would be easy to make this into an event that could be conducted alongside the state and national sprint championships. Alongside the existing gender rules I suggest adding an age rule, i.e. that you must have one athlete <25, one athlete 26-39, one athlete 40-54 and one athlete 55+ in each team. There would be very few clubs in Australia that would not be able to field a team for a race of this nature.

Focussing on Juniors


I’m exceptionally proud of the junior programme within Macarthur Triathlon Club. Thanks to the dedication of Juniors coach Guy Creber we now have a three tiered programme, the introductory TRYStars programme, the regular MacTri Juniors and the South West Sydney Academy of Sport programme for our high performance athletes. It is without a doubt one of the most comprehensive junior programmes in the country and it’s paying off; more than 50% of our club membership is under 18 years of age.

The push to develop similar programmes needs to come from above to spread this kind of junior outreach. The expansion of regional academies as a part of the ASC Winning Edge programme is a good start but the sport also needs to entice kids who aren’t going to win. Why do we have so many kids competing in Weet-Bix Tryathlons, Ironkids and the like yet not have that many involved in clubs? Where do they come from and where do they disappear to?

Most of this blog has been about image issues or the distinct lack of public knowledge about the sport. This is not the only reason that junior numbers don’t grow. There are clubs (I could name several in Sydney, but I won’t) who for various reasons choose not to support juniors. I find this daft because today’s juniors are tomorrow’s seniors. Catering for kids is not hard and to Triathlon Australia’s credit the TRYstars programme is a good start. But it needs to go further.

There are junior triathlon events run by several organisations (Weet-Bix, Elite Energy, Ironman Asia Pacific) across this country that have little to no integration with the rest of the sport yet these are the same juniors that are targeted by TRYStars. Triathlon Australia needs to target specific clubs with capacity to run a TRYstars programme locally in the lead-up to these events, especially in areas where clubs don’t run local racing for juniors to make a start. Further I believe Triathlon Australia needs to find a way to reduce the price of the TRYStars programme, even if it means a slightly garish corporate sponsorship. If Little Athletics can pick up Jetstar why can’t Triathlon Australia pick up Virgin Australia as a junior athlete partner?

Under the National Talent Academy and other high performance programmes we often hear about athletes stolen from other sports. Sometimes they work out, sometimes they don’t. This is all very well and good but when was the last time a high performance coach went talent scouting in a triathlon club? I’ve been involved in Macarthur Triathlon Club for 4 and a half years and I’m yet to see one and that’s despite the fact that our club gave the world Erin Densham, Keira Pride and Natalie Van Coevorden! Stealing athletes from other sports with promises of gold medals and the like also sells our sport short. The attitude “we’ll teach you how to ride a bike and then you’ll swim and run to gold” is factually incorrect. No athlete can compete successfully in this day and age if they’re not the complete package in short course racing which is where our high performance funding is targeted.

Finally it was suggested at the 2014 Triathlon Australia National Conference by TNSW board member Glenn Schwarzel that Triathlon Australia should seek to get Tier 1 recognition for triathlon in the school sporting programme. I have nothing else to add to that except bravo, do it now!

Chasing Corporate Dollars

A better marketed sport with more media exposure will provide opportunities for greater sponsor involvement. Triathletes, as a rule, are one of the wealthiest sporting constituencies in the country. This is fertile ground yet where is the sponsorship? 20 years ago we had companies climbing on top of each other to be involved yet in 2014 we have a small (although high quality) clothing provider, a bike insurer, a suitcase company and pretty much nobody else apart from the Australian Sports Commission. This really isn’t good enough and the TA team really need to chase some significant blue chip money. When niche sports like Volleyball can take in huge amounts of sponsorship from private companies like Hancock Prospecting you have to ask, where are we going wrong?

Recognise Age-Group athletes in all events

Triathlon Australia’s social media tends to skew toward two areas, elite ITU competition and long course racing. The former is completely natural as that is where the majority of funding for TA comes from and is where sporting glory comes in the form of World Championships, Commonwealth Games, Paralympic Games & Olympic Games. Long Course racing is too, by its sheer duration, a naturally impressive spectacle. But this strategy neglects the fact that many athletes are not in it to race elite or win Ironman. For many athletes an enticer race is a significant achievement. I have a saying in our club publications, “to me your significant race is as important as theirs.” In our club newsletter I want to tell everyone’s story be they doing an Ironman, a club race, their first ever outside event or the World Championship. Triathlon Australia’s social media should reflect that too and TA staff should be just as visible at Noosa as at Coomealla or Busselton. All athletes need to be recognised.

Make the Annual Awards Dinner affordable!

The Triathlon Australia Annual Awards Dinner looks to be a magnificent and enjoyable evening. I say looks because I’ve never been fortunate to attend. I’m never going to win a national or world championship so I’m never going to be invited yet I’d like to go. Every year I think it would be good and then I see the price and I just about have a heart attack. Yes many people in our sport are wealthy but many of us do it on a shoe string too and I think it’s only fair the rest of us get the opportunity to attend too!

If you’re going to do compulsory membership, go the whole hog

One of the adverse effects of compulsory membership was a loss of club members who only otherwise raced Ironman events or similar once a year events. If you want to make people join, make one day licenses prohibitively expensive for Ironman races…$250 should do it.

Reward National Champions

A National Champion
Trisuit idea
Regardless of whether my proposal for national championships takes off I feel that National Champions deserve to be recognised. Just as a cyclists gets to wear the national champion’s jersey, triathletes should be entitled to a national champion’s trisuit. I haven’t got a specific design in mind but I feel that elite and age-group athletes should get special recognition for the 12 months in which they are the reigning champion. Surely as a part of the uniform deal with Scody our Australian Champions should receive a custom made tri-suit (complete with name and country) in the (to be determined) national champion’s colours with the athlete’s choice of front zip, back zip or two piece suits.

Thirty years old and still going

Triathlon is a magical sport. I absolutely adore it. I’ve met amazing people, had amazing experiences, made amazing friends, been selected to represent my country at three World Championships and been treated like royalty by athletes of a much greater calibre than I. I consider myself incredibly blessed. I found the right club, the right people, the right environment. I found a sport unique, growing and yet with untapped potential.

If you got this far, full marks to you! I don’t purport to have all the answers but I do have quite a few ideas. If this blog can become a starting point for a conversation then I have achieved my goal. A modified version is being sent to the CEO and President of both Triathlon Australia and Triathlon NSW and I hope we can make something of this!

Wednesday 22 January 2014

Some thoughts on the Cycling Australia Road Nationals



There’s no doubting Australian Cycling is on an upward surge. This year’s Road Nationals are a case in point: record crowds, good tv ratings, significant social media activation and loaded fields. But Cycling Australia must not rest on their laurels; as one of the premier Olympic sports and the second highest Australian Sports Commission funded NSO (after swimming)[1] Cycling Australia needs to embrace the whole of their mantra. As the NSO they are responsible for the whole of the sport, not just the Elite Men that seemingly are their focus. 

Are Elite Men the sole focus?

You certainly could be forgiven for thinking that Cycling Australia is only interested in the Elite Men’s competition. One cursory glance at the last two Road Nationals television broadcasts would certainly imply that. In fact you could be forgiven for thinking that women didn’t ride bicycles.

Clearly the sport is more than that. In fact Cycling Australia is responsible for the sanctioning of BMX, Mountain Bike and Cyclo-Cross as well as Road and Track. Cycling Australia says as much in their own blurb:
Cycling Australia (CA) is the national administrative body responsible for the sport of cycling in Australia as recognised by the Australian Government, the International Cycling Union (UCI), the Australian Olympic Committee, the Australian Commonwealth Games Federation and the Australian Paralympic Committee.
As an organisation  our objectives are to create opportunities for all riders and people interested in cycling. We also deliver high performance programs that produce world class riders across all disciplines. We offer membership benefits to all cyclists - recreational riders through to competitive racers and importantly we are advocates for improving cycling within Australia.”[2]


At no point does it say ‘men only’ yet you could be forgiven for thinking that was the case. Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of examples where this has been demonstrated to not be true; Caroline Buchanan winning pretty much everything at the 2013 Oppys proves that. But to only televise the elite men at your biggest event of the year makes a major point whether intentional or otherwise. 

Equality at the Road Nationals 

Elite Women

Gracie Elvin going back to back in a massive sprint against
Lauren Kitchen. The best race of the weekend and not
on tv
For the Road Nationals to really be an equal playing field there must be live coverage of the women’s road race as there is the men’s. The SBS coverage of the men’s race this year was a straight time buy as SBS pretty much confirmed themselves:
“Thomas, to be clear, it is the responsibility of Cycling Australia, not SBS, they are the rights holder but are cash strapped in terms of paying for additional broadcasts.”[3]


What does this mean? It means that Cycling Australia paid SBS to cover the Elite Men’s road race but not the women’s! In 2014 how is this acceptable? At least 13 women racing on international teams took to the start line. This wasn’t some second string domestic field. It was full of professional and semi-professional athletes doing their utmost and pushing as hard as they could in front of their biggest domestic audience.

Nobody can claim lack of interest either. I’ve never seen so much anger and frustration online at the complete lack of information available. Without even a web stream it was left to cycling fans by the side of the road giving twitter updates in the biggest race of the year. Thanks to Kelvin (@crazycyclefan) for tweets like this because without him there would have been pretty much nothing available.

Essentially Cycling Australia chose to ignore the women completely. I know that Cycling Australia is in dire financial straits but this is no excuse. For an organisation that is tasked with representing and growing the sport to snub such a large percentage of their clientele is disgraceful. If it was a straight time buy then two hours of highlights of each road race would have been a better deal. The men’s race was interminably boring until the last two laps anyway!

Para-Cycling

Para-Cycling is one of the most successful areas of the sport ever undertaken by Australians. At the 2013 UCI Para-Cycling Road World Championships, the following athletes stood on the podium:
  • Michael Gallagher C5 Road Race Champion
  • Alistair Donohoe C5 Road Race Bronze, C5 ITT Bronze
  • David Nicholas C3 ITT Champion
  • Nigel Barley H3 ITT Bronze
  • Jayme Richardson C1 Road Race Champion, C1 ITT Champion
  • Simone Kennedy C3 Road Race Silver, C3 ITT Silver
  • Susan Powell C4 Road Race Bronze, C4 ITT Silver
  • Bianca Woolford T1 Road Race Silver, T2 ITT Silver
  • Carol Cooke T2 Road Race Champion, T2 ITT Champion
B Road Race, Para-Cycling Nationals 2013
Para-Cycling is conducted over both road and track yet on both occasions their national championships are relegated to irrelevance in a place and time out of sync with any other event. In 2013 the event was held in the middle of rural Victoria in April with an audience of zero (I don’t count myself because I marshalled on the course). Given the amount of world class athletes involved, many on SIS scholarships, it isn’t fair for these athletes who struggle to get attention at the best of times.
H Road Race, 2013 Para-Cycling Nationals
There is ample opportunity in Road Nationals week to ensure Para-Cycling is involved and the athletes given ample opportunity to shine on the big stage. Cycling Australia took over responsibility for Para-Cycling from the Australian Paralympic Committee many years ago. It’s time to take that commitment seriously.

Under 23 Women

Emily Roper not wearing an Australian Jersey
The UCI doesn’t recognise an Under 23 category at World level but Cycling Australia (to their credit) do so in the national championships. Although not conducted as separate events, awards ceremonies are conducted but there’s a degree of inequality in this too. All national champions at the road nationals are awarded national jerseys except the Under 23 Women. I’ve not been able to get a straight answer out of anybody as to why this is the case. The closest I’ve come to is that the winner doesn’t get a jersey because there is no international race for them to wear it in. If that is the reason it’s ridiculous; even if there is no where that the jersey can be worn that doesn’t mean the winner shouldn’t get the same plaudits! If it’s good enough for the U23 Men, it’s good enough for the U23 Women. 

Giving Everyone a Chance

For as long as anybody can remember the Road Nationals have been held in and around Ballarat. Whilst Ballarat and the Buninyong might be a good circuit to race on, it’s far from the only place in Australia capable of hosting the Road Nationals. It’s not only the spectators getting sick of the course. Sprinter Chloe Hosking has made it abundantly clear what she thinks of going to the same place every year:


Frankly she has a point. Not only is the race predictable it means only one sort of rider can ever win. If you look at best practise around the world, championships are moved continuously and the course types change to give everyone a chance; sprinters, climbers, classics riders etc. If the Nationals is to continue to grow everyone deserves a chance. It’s time to move the event around. I don’t care if it’s on a rotation basis between the states or goes to a bidding process but I feel the event needs growth that only a literal change in scenery can provide. 

Embracing all racing

2013 UCI Road World Championship-Women's TTT
The road nationals currently encapsulate every road racing discipline except the Team Time Trial. I’d like to see a state vs state Team Time Trial. Realistically there could be seven teams competing in elite men and elite women’s competition in what could be a super exciting event and a positive addition to the week. 

Scheduling my suggestions

As the road nationals currently stand it is in fact really easy to fit in my suggested changes and give all athletes the credit they deserve: If the free day on Friday is utilised for the Para-Cycling it all fits perfectly:
  • Wednesday: All ITT events.
  • Thursday (morning): State teams TTT
  • Thursday (evening): All Criterium events
  • Friday (morning): Handcycle and Trike Road Races
  • Friday (afternoon): C1-5 and B Road Races
  • Saturday (morning): Men’s U23 Road Race
  • Saturday (afternoon): Women’s Road Race
  • Sunday (morning): Men’s Road Race. 

Conclusion

The Road Nationals are the biggest domestic cycling event of the year and consistently draw in some of the largest cycling crowds in Australia. If the sport is to truly develop and recognise all elements of road racing at its nationals, Cycling Australia needs to promote all of it on the biggest platform of the year. In 2015 the governing body must do this; it’s their job after all! There are no excuses. Let’s hope the new President with his vested interest in women’s cycling (a small matter of owning the Orica-GreenEDGE-AIS) can force through such an agenda.



[1] http://www.ausport.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/539573/NSO_NSOD_2013-14_Funding_for_web.pdf
[2] http://cycling.org.au/Home/About-CA
[3] https://www.facebook.com/SBSCyclingCentral/posts/10152102658178427?comment_id=29277384&reply_comment_id=29285120&total_comments=2