Posts

Do I Look Manly in This? Body Positivity for Sportswomen

Image
When I watched  this  video on the Women in Sport Facebook page, I couldn't believe what I was listening to. Although I was also recently shocked to learn in  this  Instagram post that the amazing England Red Roses Rugby player, Sarah Bern, shared how she has struggled with negative self-talk and feeling too unattractively masculine instead of petite and feminine and therefore attractive in the way a woman should be, according to society. For instance, wondering before she posts on social media: "Do I look too broad?" "Do my arms look too manly?"  This pressure to look pretty and feminine while exercising and playing tennis, as well as this negative self-talk and bodily self-image as a muscular sportswoman all passed me by, thankfully! I've always played sports, especially tennis, but I don't remember anyone, coaches or peer group, telling me how I should look or behave. Not that I would have taken any notice if they had. It's almost the equivalent o...

More Doping Ban Controversy: Swiatek's Failed Test

Just about everyone is wading in on this year's doping cases in tennis. But there's no doubt that players are treated inconsistently and illogically. Tara Moore was banned for 19 months after eating contaminated meat in Columbia. She can't look that up on a website and see a 'don't eat this meat you'll fail a doping test' attached to the menu. Although the organisers knew about it but oh dear didn't quite inform the players soon enough. In which case it's the organisers fault and she shouldn't have been banned. Using common sense would help. I can understand Halep being rather annoyed because it's a parallel case with Swiatek. Both she and Swiatek take something which should be doping safe but has been cross contaminated and they fail a doping test. In both cases the amount is negligible so I don't see the need for banning players like this.  To ban a player due to a failed doping test should only happen when it's clear that the amoun...

LGBT+ Representation in Tennis at the French Open

According to Pink News, there's 5 gay women in the French Open providing us with LGBT+ representation in tennis. Click  here  to see their Facebook video of them. ๐Ÿณ️‍๐ŸŒˆ๐ŸŽพ So, we have 5 sapphic women out of how many in the Grand Slam women's draw? There's 128 women in just the singles main draw alone!! But there are 240 singles players between the main draw and qualifiers. So the percentage is much worse than that because it's 4 out of 240 and 1 more, Demi Schuurs, from the doubles draw. The main draw is comprised of 104 women who, simply through their ranking, go straight to the main draw. The qualifying draw is also a draw of 128 players, 16 of whom won all their matches to become the qualifiers who go forwards to the main draw. Then there's 8 women who gain entry through gaining wild cards. That's called LGBT+ representation? ๐Ÿคฃ  Yes, generically, it's LGBT+ representation ๐Ÿณ️‍๐ŸŒˆ, albeit miniscule, but they are only representing one category within the LG...

Ankle Injuries

Image
  Image from SMART-Servier Medical Art, Servier Laboratoires; freely reusable under Creative Commons Licence Here we have very nice diagrams of different levels of severity of ankle sprains: Top left: healthy Top right: grade 1 strain Bottom left: grade 2, depicting a partial tear of around 50%  Bottom right: grade 3: surgery level because the tear is 100%  Alcaraz stated that he was told that an MRI scan showed he has a grade 2 lateral ankle sprain.  Lateral means the outside of the ankle, near the ankle joint, as opposed to the ligaments on the inner side of the foot. These outside ligaments are vital for strength, stability, flexibility and mobility. Typically, the lateral ligaments sprain and tear more easily. As you can see in the chart, the lateral ankle ligaments are a combination of three connecting ligaments: posterior talofibular ligament (PTFL, top left of the three), anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL, top right of the three) and the calcaneofibular liga...

Post-match statements and Swiatek

Today I read an article, which sensationalises some so-called fan comments that attacked Swiatek's analysis of her suprise loss to Kalinskaya. The article even repeats totally unacceptable, untrue, nasty comments made about Swiatek such as: she hates women. While it may be true that someone somewhere posted that comment, it doesn't mean that it's your job as a writer or journalist to amplify it, normalise it uncritically and potentially encourage others to read it and perhaps then see Swiatek in a different light, simply because you picked out that comment instead of the supportive ones I'm sure she would have also received from fans.  See  here  to read it.  I think Swiatek is right. It probably did have more to do with her than the opponent. We sometimes see a top 10 player suddenly lose to a much lower ranked player and we wonder why. The answer lies in 1) did someone other than their coach help them beat the top player by giving them certain tips 2) lower ranked ...

Not again, Martina!

Image
© Jana Kaucky 2023 All Rights Reserved Caption: 'What on Earth?!' "Alcaraz stated that the Czech-American tennis legend’s advice came in handy as was seen promptly implementing the strategy during his Wimbledon final against Djokovic. “(The advice helped me) a lot,” he said on Tennis Channel. The 20-year-old said that he thanked Martina Navratilova for her advice when they crossed paths after his victory. “I saw her after I got out from the court. And I told her, ‘It was your advice! The key.’ I sliced. I tried to do everything she told me. I mean, nine times champion – You have to do whatever she tells you. And I think it was great,” he said." Quoted from  sportskeeda Not again. Every time Martina gives a player advice before a final they win at Wimbledon and this has happened on several occasions now. She 'advised' Kerber in an article right before that Wimbledon final and she won, denying Serena her 24th Grand Slam by using her tactics. It's unfair she ...

Underwear at Wimbledon

Who on earth legislates about underwear especially women's underwear? There's a word for that obsession.  Wow! Women tennis players are allowed to wear non-white lower-half underwear at Wimbledon. I'm stoked ๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿคฃ. It was a stupid rule to start with! ๐ŸคฆAzarenka calls it a thoughtful decision. So now women are supposed to be grateful that Wimbledon officials are no longer checking the colour of their knickers?!  Garments that are the norm elsewhere around the world (colourful or white) at every tournament are somehow suddenly in need of strict regulation and judged wrong or more special simply because it's Wimbledon. ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿคท Surely a huge percentage of professional women tennis players are on the pill which merely gives you a fake period which is hardly noticeable anyway. Or there's something called a tampon which can cause TSS but since all-whites is only a Wimbledon issue it's doubtful you'll be affected that quickly. Besides you can take it out straight after ...