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Athlete mums see ‘shift in culture’ at Paris Olympic Games

Athlete mums see ‘shift in culture’ at Paris Olympic Games

Olympian mums have shown that old stereotypes of motherhood being incompatible with a career in competitive sport are giving way.
02 Aug, 2024

While motherhood was once seen as incompatible with a career in competitive sport, Olympian mums have shown that old stereotypes are giving way, from judo to fencing, basketball and beyond.

With times changing for competitors who travel to the Olympics with kids in tow, retired track great Allyson Felix has partnered with Pampers to set up a first-of-its-kind nursery for athlete parents and their children.

Felix, the most decorated female track and field athlete in Olympic history with 11 medals, told Reuters the facility could help level the playing field between athletes with vast resources and those without.

“We’re talking about (athletes from) countries that can be very small, can be underfunded. And we know that how expensive it is,” said Felix, who resumed her competitive career after giving birth to her first child in 2018.

Felix says there has been progress since she revealed five years ago that she split with sponsor Nike after the athletics mega-brand cut her pay when she got pregnant.

“There’s been a shift in culture,” she said, and the nursery reflects a growing need for resources at the Games, as athletes buck old stereotypes about working mothers in sports.

“It’s being viewed differently… Now you’re seeing women who feel like at the peak of their careers, they can have children if they choose to and that doesn’t mean that they are going to stop competing.”

That much is evident in Lille, where US basketball player Breanna Stewart said there were more kids than ever before within her delegation.

“Speaking for moms, especially those that are here in the Olympics, we want to be great at both,” said Stewart, who is competing in her third Olympics. “We just want to continue to change the standard, change the narrative.”

Stewart’s daughter, Ruby, was famously born via surrogacy less than 48 hours after the US team won gold in Tokyo.

She and her wife, retired Spanish basketball player Marta Xargay, welcomed their son, Theo, last year.

Stewart, a twice MVP in the WNBA, said Ruby will celebrate her third birthday at the Games: “There’s a ton of kids with our team USA group. So I’m sure we’ll find something fun.”

Fans in Paris said the sight of athlete mothers at the highest level of their sport was a welcome change.

“Careers don’t stop when you have a baby, and that is beautiful,” said French fan Auriane Sanchez, 21, who watched compatriot Clarisse Agbegnenou pick up bronze in judo on Tuesday.

Agbegnenou, who gave birth to her daughter in 2022, led a campaign to get the French Olympic Committee to provide hotel rooms for breastfeeding French athletes.

“That’s incredible to come back like this after a pregnancy. A little girl that I’m still breastfeeding — that’s crazy. I can be proud of me. I’ll put the medal around my daughter’s neck,” she said.

Brazilian judoka Natasha Ferreira, who adopted her son seven years ago when she was 18, said she welcomed the support she got in Paris.

“Athletes already have to be very disciplined and when you have a son you will have to be even more disciplined to be able to have quality time,” she told Reuters. “It was really good to have my son with me in the Olympics.”

Comments

Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Aug 02, 2024 12:20pm
Everything in today's dynamic world is changing including but not limited to cultural, social, economic, religious, sports, political and other values, norms, principles and practices.
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NYS Aug 02, 2024 04:52pm
Playing with newborns having fun whilst make you more disciplined ... Now it's up to you whether you chose family life in between sports era or as second chapter of life I have examples of female athletes > Mãria Sharapova started family life post retirement Sërena Williams Sania Mirza taken two years maternity break and resume GMOAT
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Laila Aug 04, 2024 08:41am
While we in Pakistan under the guise of Islam and socalled honor/haya/shame, are busy as usual lecturing females on honor and confining them to their homes (4 diwari) because "what will people say?" and decent women should not be outside but hide and veil everything about herself even something as natural as pregnancy, our Arab brethren are moving forward. Yet we regress. Egyptian fencer, Neda Hafez, was kicking some a.. at the Olympics - whilst 7 months pregnant. No, she didn't wear shalwar kameez or dubatta, yes, she wore the traditional fencing uniform (western..gasp!) and yes the shape of her body and tummy showed. She didn't win but imagine the story she can tell her child one day. No professional fencing or other sports opportunities for girls in Pakistan and no female Olympics contestants from Pakistan. Arab women are represented in swimming, fencing, martial arts, volleyball, football, you name it. And guess what? They don't become less Muslim or less Eastern (or rather Northern) because of it. Their countrymen proudly celebrate them instead of calling them Westernized and immoral. Now, THAT, is empowerment.
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