by Will Hall
Why women haven't been allowed to compete in the ski jump event at the Winter Olympics until Sochi 2014.
Women can
currently compete in other ski jump tournaments and competitions, but they have
been hitherto been denied the event at the Winter Olympics. They have signed petitions for
the event since the Nagano Olympics in 1998, but all of them have been
unsuccessful. In 1991, the International Olympics Committee (IOC) announced that
all new events being added to the games in the future must be open to both men and
women. However, this rule did not apply to any events that already took place
at the games.
This seemed a little strange that the IOC wouldn’t allow women to ski
jump as, in my opinion, there was no ‘valid’ reason for this. Some new sports were
added to the games in 2010, two of which are called ski cross and snowboard
cross. Fewer female athletes competed in ski and snowboard cross than in ski
jump in 2010, so it would sound like a good idea to open up ski jump to women.
One of the reasons that women’s ski jump supposedly has been disallowed is that
‘there are only so many athletes that the locations can accommodate for’ at the
Olympics. A member of the IOC said women shouldn’t be allowed to compete
because the sport ‘seems not to be appropriate for ladies from a medical point
of view’.
These
reasons put forward from the IOC were ludicrous and women’s ski jumping should
have been added to the Olympics a long time ago. The IOC started to seriously
think about adding the event in 2009, by which time it was too late to feature
in the Vancouver Winter Olympics as the schedules had already been established.
As you will
probably know, women’s ski jumping was finally brought in to the Sochi 2014 games and
the gold medal was awarded to Germany with Austria gaining silver and France
achieving bronze. Not before time.
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