2024-07-26 00:00:00 Tiga tahun sebelum Olimpiade terakhir kali diadakan di Paris pada tahun 1924, sekelompok kecil atlet wanita yang dipimpin oleh Alice Milliat mengadakan Olimpiade mereka sendiri karena sebagian besar mereka masih dikecualikan dari acara olahraga terbesar di dunia tersebut.
Berita — Three years before the Olympics last visited Paris in 1924, a small gathering of female athletes led by Alice Milliat staged their own Games as they were still largely excluded from the biggest sporting event in the world.
Female athletes competing at the Games was simply not âin keepingâ with how Pierre de Coubertin envisioned the event he revived in 1896, an event he saw as an âexaltation of male athleticism ⦠with the applause of women as a reward,â as he wrote in 1912.
Now, a century later in the French capital, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has distributed its quota places equally in the hope that an equal number of male and female athletes would compete at an Olympic Games for the very first time, though it fell just short of that target as ultimately 5630 male athletes and 5416 female athletes will compete in Paris.
Still, women representing 49% of the total athlete population marks another step for gender equality in sport, one that has been celebrated as part of the increasing popularity of womenâs sports and comes as the IOC attempts to address sexist media coverage and improve the support available for parent athletes.
But at the same time, beyond the numbers, activists and academics point out that historic inequalities still linger at the Olympics, influencing everything from the small proportion of female coaches present to attitudes toward womenâs clothing.
âParity is one part of equality, but it isnât equality,â Michele Donnelly, assistant professor of sport management at Brock University who specializes in gender equality at the Olympics, told Berita Sport.
âItâs the numerical piece, but itâs not the conditions, status, experience piece that is still missing from large parts of athleteâs experiences at the Games.â Nonetheless, at the same time as the Olympics targets reaching gender parity among its athletes, there is a âbuzz right now with womenâs sport,â soccer player Emily Sonnett told Berita.
It is part of moment when the growth of womenâs sport is âunreal,â as Olympic volleyball player Jordan Larson told Berita, and headlines in the USA are dominated by figures like Caitlin Clark, Simone Biles and Nelly Korda.
And with the biggest ever proportion of female athletes competing on sportâs biggest stage spotlighted by âtwo weeks of major media coverage where the entire world is tuning in to watch,â it will have wide-reaching consequences outside sport too, Katrina Adams, the IOCâs Gender Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Champion for 2023, and the first ever Black woman to be President and CEO of the United States Tennis Association (USTA), told Berita Sport.
Katrina Adams was honored as the IOCâs Gender Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Champion for 2023.
Courtesy Paul Zimmer/ITF âI think thatâs going to elevate how people are thinking about it, how people are looking at it, how the sponsors are looking at it, how businesspeople are looking at it and how the focus is going to say, wow, we really have to start to look at our sport different and our business different and how we address gender equality,â she says.
âOnly just now getting hereâ Getting closer to this landmark of gender equality is âincredibly important,â Olympic weightlifter Jourdan Delacruz told Berita.
âItâs kind of shocking that itâs 2024 and weâre only just now getting here but I think it means not only that women are becoming better competitors but from the grassroots level, thereâs more access, ⦠thereâs more representation that encourages girls and women to get into sport,â she said.
Women were prohibited from competing, and spectating, at the first ever modern Olympics in 1896, and then only allowed to participate in sports deemed suitable for them such as tennis, golf or equestrian.
It wasnât until 2012 that the IOC allowed women to compete in all sports and 2014 that the organization committed to achieving gender parity among athletes at the Olympics, setting itself a series of targets to reach this milestone.
A Czechoslovakian long jumper competes at the 1922 Women's World Games, the second edition of the games organized in response to the IOC's refusal to allow women to compete in athletics events at the Olympics.
Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images âTheyâve really developed a roadmap and a plan that leads us to the place that weâre at this summer in the Paris Olympics,â Nicole LaVoi, director of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport, told Berita.
âThereâs been some metrics and some accountability in terms of reaching these target metrics and one was equal participation so thatâs really important.â Over time, the number of female athletes at the Olympics has increased, rising from 11.4% of athletes in 1960, to 28.9% in 1996, 44.2% in 2016 before this opportunity for gender parity in 2024.
âWe fought hard to be here, and I just want to say thank you to those in the past because you guys fought hard for me to be here right now,â US Olympic boxer Morelle McCane told Berita.
âJust seeing all the love pour into womenâs sport, it just opens up all these avenues.
Itâs beautiful.â Part of the IOCâs strategy to reach gender parity has involved tweaking its program of events, in some cases by cutting male-only events like the 50km race walk in favor of a mixed gender marathon relay instead.
In Paris, there will be slightly fewer womenâs events than menâs events â 152 compared to 157 â as well as 20 mixed gender events.
And tangible images of gender equality will be emblazoned on TV screens around the world at these Olympics.
The IOC has encouraged each country to have a male and female flagbearer at the opening ceremony, like in Tokyo when 91% of participating countries had a female flagbearer â a âsubtleâ but âmajorâ shift, said Adams.
Flag bearers Adriana DÃaz and Brian Afanador of Team Puerto Rico walk their team out during the opening ceremony at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.
Hannah McKay/Pool/Getty Images The organization has also reordered the broadcast schedule so that womenâs events will run during peak viewing times and provided direction to producers to encourage a âgender equal and fair portrayal,â while the Olympic Broadcasting Services have increased the number of female commentators employed to 40% of its total.
Whether such steps have an impact remains to be seen â female athletes were about 10 times more likely than their male counterparts to be visually objectified by a camera angle at the Tokyo Olympics, according to a report conducted by The Representation Project.
And for athletes with children, there will be positive changes at this Olympics too, even if athletes rather than organizers are often the driving force behind them.
Following pressure, most notably from French judo star Clarisse Agbegnenou, French Olympic Committee secretary general Astrid Guyart told reporters that breastfeeding athletes would be able to stay in hotels nearby the Olympic Village with their infants, per local media.
Panamanian artistic gymnast Hillary Heron interacts with her coach Yareimi Vazquez (L) and her daughter Aitana Vazquez inside a nursery room in the Athletes' Village ahead of the Paris Olympic Games.
Maja Hitij/Getty Images A nursery on site in the Olympic village for athletes will also provide space for athlete parents to spend time with their children.
âMore women through the pipeline of leadershipâ But as female athletes are achieving gender parity on the field of play, female representation in the boardroom and among coaches, where power is concentrated, still lags behind.
Just 13% of coaches who attended the Tokyo Olympics were women, a number that is widely expected to rise but still remain low in Paris.
âIf you look at women in coaching ⦠youâre going to see a small percentage compared to men being in that role because since sports have started, itâs been a menâs play until women have had to start showing we can do great things as coaches and athletes ⦠and weâre starting to see that shift,â Mechelle Lewis Freeman â a former Olympian and now the head womenâs relay coach for the USAâs Track and Field Team â told Berita.
Freeman is the first woman to hold that post, she says, adding that the societal norms which traditionally prevented women from holding such leadership roles in sport are beginning to break down, particularly as their work âspeaks for themselves.â âNow youâre starting to see ⦠the spaces being created,â she said.
âBecause the talent was always there ⦠and so now youâre having that space for you to be able to demonstrate and show that, yes, women can do this too.â First Lady Jill Biden, left, learns the proper technique to pass a baton from head women's relay coach Mechelle Lewis Freeman.
George Walker IV/AP With still such a low proportion of female coaches, they have taken to creating their own support systems, outside of their national federations and the IOC.
Vicky Huyton, founder of the Female Coaching Network, has created a WhatsApp group for 52 of the worldâs best female coaches to support one another, and share advice as well as vent about a system that still discriminates against women.
âWeâve got women who have coached a current Olympic gold medalist ⦠that have still not been chosen as team staff for Paris, even though that athlete is going to be defending their gold medal,â Huyton told Berita.
She explains that many national teams donât have a standardized way of selecting coaches for a major competition, instead relying on âwho the head coach wants,â rather than considering the needs of female athletes.
Women are underrepresented in the boardroom as well as among the coaching staff â there has never been a female president of the IOC, while just a third of the IOC Executive Board are women.
For much of Adamsâ career in the boardroom, after she had retired from professional tennis, she would look around âand constantly realize I was the only one,â she says, prompting her to âdo something about itâ and push for change.
âIf you donât have female decision makers in the room that understand female athletes, itâs very hard to make decisions,â she said.
âThatâs why we need to have diversity of thought in the boardrooms that are helping people understand what the needs of female athletes are, as opposed to just pushing these aside because they donât understand them.â âMy hoo haa is gonna be outâ For female athletes, meanwhile, controversies around their clothing have appeared in the build-up to Paris, much like they did in Tokyo when several of them found themselves rebuked for wearing too little â or too much â clothing.
âMy hoo haa is gonna be out,â American long jumper Tara Davis-Woodall quipped when Nike released its designs for the USA track and field athletes at the Olympics with the womenâs outfits featuring a high-cut bikini waistline and the menâs a boxer short cut that covered up more of their bodies.
Nike's design for the US women's team outfit, right, is seen in an image posted to X by @CitiusMag.
From CitiusMag via X Related article Nikeâs US womenâs Olympic team outfits criticized for being âborn of patriarchal forcesâ Such a discrepancy prompted a torrent of criticism, including from former US track and field athlete Lauren Fleshman who wrote on Instagram that athletes âshould be able to compete without dedicating brain space to constant pube vigilance ⦠or having every vulnerable piece of your body on display.â Nike later said the leotard design would be one of several options available and some athletes, including Davis-Woodall, walked back their criticism when they saw the uniform in person.
Still, the controversy is indicative of the greater scrutiny female athletes face when choosing their clothing.
Due to Franceâs secular laws, Muslim athletes who wear hijabs while competing cannot wear them in Paris â a step that Amnesty International says âdefies Olympic values and human rightsâ and that athletes say has forced them to choose between their faith and love of sport.
Some accommodations have been made for these athletes at the last minute, like French sprinter Sounkamba Sylla who is now able to participate in the Opening Ceremony after she had previously said she would not be allowed because she wears a hijab.
On Thursday, French sports minister Amélie Oudéa-Castéra told Beritaâs Christiane Amanpour that Sylla and LVHM, who are designing Franceâs Opening Ceremony, found a solution where the sprinter can cover her hair.
âThereâs a lot left to do, in terms of these kinds of things,â Donnelly said.
âOne of my biggest concerns, I think about the way that the IOC is promoting #genderequal Olympics is that overstating the accomplishments of these Games really sends the message that weâve achieved everything we need to achieve with gender equality.
And we know that without conscious, intentional action, to move towards gender equality, we consistently see regression.â Beritaâs Coy Wire, Amy Jordan and Dan Moriarty contributed reporting.