The Pro Sports Magazine March 2015
Alexis DeJoria – Drag racer Late Princess Lalla Aicha, Invicta Fighting Championships, Thailand Women’s Cricket Team, Shannon Knapp, Exclusive Interviews & Articles
SIM Unsung Hero, GN4LW, Outstanding Athelete Top tips and more...
March 2015 1
Photo credit: Gary Nastase Photography
2 March 2015
SPORTS
TM
International WELCOME “The further I go the less I know” is an often quoted saying and none is more true than for
magazine showcases and brings these people to light.
SPORTS
me with the magazine. When I
This issue has the amazing Alexis
started this journey ten years
DeJoria on the cover, bringing
ago I thought I knew about the
another sport to the fore that
women’s sports being played and
many wouldn’t have seen or
yet here I am feeling like I have
heard of. Invicta FC president
only just scratched the surface,
and founder Shannon Knapp talks
not only of sports, but of where
all things MMA and skateboard
they are played and of all the
legend Cindy Whitehead spent
people involved - it’s incredible.
time chatting with me about her
A good example of this is Richard Lockwood, who has spent years devoting
himself
to
helping
promote cricket in Thailand. His commitment to improving a sport being played somewhere most wouldn’t even have guessed it
TM
International
fantastic mission for girls with a great approach. All of these women are at the forefront of their fields and it’s been a great couple of months chatting with them and all the other athletes for this issue.
would be played is amazing. It’s
Our Pioneers feature this month
encouraging that there are people
has been really fascinating to
like this all over the world and I
research and makes me realise
hope that in some small way the
even more the incredible women
who have gone before and paved the way for where things are today. There may not be equality, recognition and all the things people talk about, but compared to then, wow what exciting times we live in! So read and enjoy this issue, tell your friends and in your own way be a force for change. Thanks for reading and your ongoing support,
Myak-Paul Homberger - Editor
March 2015 Issue
No 014 March 2015 3
Papaya P h o t o g r a p h y
S P O R T S ● S P E C I A L I S T E V E N T S ● C O R P O R AT E E V E N T S
www.papayaphotography.co.uk
4 March 2015
SPORTS
TM
International Contents
SPORTS
Alexis DeJoria - Drag Racer 8
Pioneer - The Late Princess Lalla Aicha of Morocco 16
TM
A sponsors point of view 20 Invicta Fighting Championships 24
International
Thailand Women’s Cricket Team 30 Move over darling - the girls are here
36
Shannon Knapp 44 Sylvia Neid 49 Girl is NOT a 4 letter word
56
Matrix Fitness 64 Sports International Magazine’s Outstanding Athlete
72
Match Balls over the years 78 Sports International Magazine’s Unsung Hero
82
Thankyou’s 88 Contact 89
March 2015 Issue
No 014 March 2015 5
Contributors Myak-Paul Homberger
Steffan Wyman
Kelly Barnes
Aside from being
Starting out in
A former
Women’s cycling
International
a huge sports nut and champion of women’s sport, has numerous qualifications including being a BAWLA qualified weight training coach, two martial arts black belts alongside his instructor level in Urban Krav Maga. He is also an NLP practitioner and sociologist
team management in 2004, it
amateur boxer and the first
was never Steffan’s initial goal
woman in the UK to receive
to work in the sport full time.
Sport England funding for female
However as time passed and he
boxing, Kelly is a passionate
became more involved it was
all round sportswoman, a keen
clear that’s what he wanted and
cyclist and a triathlon newbie
he began to work full time in
with ambitions of GB age group
the sport from 2008. Previously
success.
with an HND in RAB.
working in financial services, he’s
Photography is his main passion
experience to try to bring in
and he has been published internationally. Myak has worked with men’s and women’s national teams, as well as with premiership teams and individual players.
used his previous management a level of professionalism and organization to the teams he
PR background she has launched the Yellow Jersey Cycle Insurance brand and is committed to
runs.
promoting women’s cycling,
In 2010 he took a step back from
Cycling. With professional and
professional teams to work on
competitive experience in other
a project with Matrix Fitness to
male dominated sports including
try to develop the UK racing
horseracing and boxing, Kelly
scene and create a new stable
is able to bring her board level
team, giving domestic riders the
experience into women’s cycling
opportunity they needed. After 5
and play a role in increasing
years, the time has come for the
participation and championing
Matrix Fitness team to return to
the development of women’s
the professional peloton and in
cycling.
2015 they are lining up against the worlds biggest teams in the worlds biggest races.
6 March 2015
With a successful marketing and
first step; sponsoring Matrix Pro
Harriet Rochester
Richard Lockwood
Isa du Toit
Richard Lockwood
whose love of good, wholesome
Harriet Rochester
food includes a wide range of
is an award
became interested in cricket statistics when he became scorer for the school team and was given a job on The Cricketer Magazine on leaving university. Richard edited The Cricketer Quarterly Facts & Figures publication for almost 20 years while also providing averages for newspapers, then worked as a scorer and statistician for television on cricket broadcasts in England
Isa du Toit is a food writer
interests - from delicious recipes
winning senior PR and marketing
and the vast array of ingredients
practitioner. Driven by a
that make food enjoyable, to
passion for sport, horse racing,
learning skills and traditional
equestrianism and business
ways of food preparation; artisan
combined with 20 years involved
baking and ‘the real bread’
in sport both as a competitor and
campaign; the sociology of food:
working through to governance
meanings, traditions, diversity
and corporate level, she founded
and change; the way in which
her own consultancy, Rochester
food and eating together can
PR & Marketing in 2007.
build bridges and bring people together; regional and cultural
around the world.
differences in food; the concept
Richard decided Thailand would
research into the links between
make a good base for this work when he discovered there was so much cricket being played in Bangkok and Chiang Mai and in such beautiful settings. He still works on the Indian Premier League every year but spends most of his time helping to promote cricket in Thailand.
of ‘food as medicine’ and the diet, lifestyle and health. She has a positive approach to food, and believes passionately that anyone (including children!) can learn to cook - and that good food doesn’t need to be expensive; to the contrary, that it is possible to make easy, cheap, nutritious and delicious meals.
Raising the profile of Women’s sport, encouraging participation and address gender balance is a further area Harriet focuses her interests. She is an active committee member of Women in Racing and has recently launched Rochester Women, communicating the success stories of sportswomen and female teams and in turn encouraging investment into these area via sponsorship. Harriet is also a freelance experiential and sport journalist and competes regularly in Eventing on board Thomas, a former racehorse who she has retrained. Harriet Rochester @HatRochesterPR
March 2015 7
Drag Racer 8 March 2015
Photo credit: Gary Na
astase Photography
Alexis DeJoria Exclusive interview and article by Myak Homberger By her own admission, Alexis DeJoria had a colourful early life. “I wasn’t always the easiest kid growing up”, she says. And yet here she stands today on the shoulders of giants (and petrol heads) at the pinnacle of Drag Racing in the world. The stakes are high: the 60th anniversary of The Big Go., the U.S. Nationals it’s the biggest, most prestigious race in NHRA drag racing history with a $100,000 purse which Alexis has won.
Photo credit: Gary Nastase Photography
March 2015 9
Alexis drives/pilots a Nitro Funny Car in the NHRA
bottle or a BBQ bottle, strapping you to it, letting
(National Hot Rod Association). This is the top of
some gas out and lighting it hoping that it won’t blow
the pile - there is nowhere else to go in Drag racing
up. Welcome to Alexis’ world. “It’s only a matter of
terms. And let’s be clear, this is a non-gendered sport.
time before a car blows up,” she says matter of factly.
As Alexis explains, “...when the hood goes down, the
She isn’t doing it for the thrill of the risk though, she is
cars don’t know if it’s male or female”. Alexis is racing
doing it because she loves every aspect of the sport.
with the best in the world, male or female.
I asked Alexis what it’s like to drive at speeds like
Alexis’ car is a 10,000 horsepower Toyota Nitro
that? “Four seconds of awesomeness!” she says,
Funny Car; it is regarded as one of the world’s most
clearly enjoying and reliving it in her mind. But then
powerful race cars. Flying down the strip (the 1,000
she continues to talk about the focus she needs,
“...there is nothing faster than this”
and how when she gets into the car and straps in, her focus narrows, she controls her breathing and clears her head. As she says, “...you can’t get caught in emotion, you don’t have time to make mistakes”. After shooting at speed down the strip the driver then needs to deploy a parachute manually to slow
foot stretch of road the race is held on) at 320 mph
the Drag car down, but there is a backup auto in case
in less than 4 seconds, is not something for the faint
the driver is knocked unconscious! This is a sport with
hearted! As Alexis says “...there is nothing faster than
risks in every area and yet Alexis is very matter of fact:
this”. However that all pales into insignificance when
she is doing what she loves, so what’s the problem, as
she explains how the car is propelled: “...oh, it’s nitro
far as she is concerned. What a great outlook on life!
methane, a liquid form of propane, it’s like a ticking time bomb”. So imagine taking a patio heater gas
10 March 2015
Photo credit: Gary Nastase Photography
Alexis has come up through the ranks, she has
“...you can’t get caught in emotion, you don’t have time to make mistakes”
Photo credit: Gary Nastase Photography
March 2015 11
12 credit: March 2015 Photo Gary Nastase Photography
“My father brought me up that you need to learn all the aspects of something if you want to master it,� March 2015 13
earned her stripes, and has chosen to learn all the various areas of the sport so that she can not only understand how it all works but because she felt it was the only way to race a Drag car at this level and get the respect. “My father brought me up that you need to learn all the aspects of something if you want to master it,” she says. This has been Alexis’ dream since streetcar racing at sixteen with her friends and going to see her first drag race. As she says, “...it’s such a thrill, it captured my heart. I have a passion for this sport”. Nitro Funny Cars in the NHRA was her goal and she has achieved it the old fashioned way with dedication, hard work and commitment. The way others on the circuit treat her and are with her is testament to this fact. It’s not just about driving the car though - it’s about how the driver processes everything at such speed over such a short space, as Alexis explained: “...it’s all over so quickly, but after +50 times your brain slows the whole process down, it seems like forever. You drive with peripheral vision; it’s incredible what the brain is capable of.” This for me is part of what is so enjoyable in listening to Alexis talk, not only is she passionate about what she does, but it’s the way that she marvels in all aspects, including how the human body/brain works. When I first started finding more about Drag Racing, Alexis stood out for me in all the footage I watched and all I read about her. There was talk of ‘team and of family’ and images and footage of her and her team and family having a genuine connection. Without mentioning this observation to Alexis, she almost instantly started talking about the support from her family and her wonderful team. As she said second sentence in, “...it’s great to have my family around, they are so supportive”. When we talk about her crew she makes it very clear that “...if a driver starts to think it’s about them it’s a 14 March 2015
Photos credit: Gary Nastase Photography
huge injustice to the team. They work so hard to get
be the fastest driver”. Alexis is already the Quickest
the cars ready, I couldn’t do it”. As I push her on the
Woman in NHRA Funny Car History, recording 3.997
‘team’ v ‘star’, she continues “....I love the team, they
seconds for the track, as well as the most successful
are like a second family”, “....they are a great group
female drag racer of all time. This season the team sat
of guys that work with me on the team, I just steer
at number 2 for a period and this makes her desire
the car down the strip”. Some may call it humility but
and target of number 1 very realistic and achievable.
I think there is more to it than that. She knows that she is a good driver but more importantly, she knows her role and she is comfortable in her own skin - which makes her for formidable on the track and incredibly grounded off it. Alexis knows where she is going but she wants to go there with the team/family, not over them. When speaking of her father and his support of her she says, “....seeing my dad finally being proud of his daughter means the world to me”. This speaks volumes of the person and where her values are at. We spoke about women in sport and women who are
Alexis is a racer who understands, appreciates and revels in all aspects of Drag Racing - and she isn’t going alone, she is taking her team and family with her. The way Alexis is, is contagious: you can’t help but come away from an encounter with Alexis without her enthusiasm for life and the love of what she does
“...it’s such a thrill, it captured my heart...”
in mixed sports such as she is and she is very clear: “I see myself as a drag racer, I don’t wave the pink
rubbing off on you. The sense from talking with Alexis
flag, it’s not what I want to accomplish”. Having said
is that she has found peace and her place in this world
that, Alexis is very quick to make sure I understand
and that makes for a very grounded, focused and
her, she appreciates the accolades and the records
exciting racer!
she breaks as a woman, but as she says, “I want to
Photo credit: Gary Nastase Photography
March 2015 15
Pioneer after which he became known as Abb al-Watan alMaghribi (Father of the Moroccan Nation). In April 1947 on a visit to Tangiers, the Sultan gave a speech in which he declared the unity of the Moroccan nation under his sovereignty, without any reference to the French and Spanish protectorates. Princess Lalla Aicha, who was only seventeen at the time, stood on the podium with her father, without a veil and dressed like a modern Western woman. Princess Lalla Aicha and her brother Hassan both gave speeches. In her speech Princess Lalla Aicha urged women to take part in the political sphere and fight for their freedom Photos courtesy: Association du Trophee HassanII de Golf
alongside with men. She emphasised how her father
The Late Princess Lalla Aicha of Morocco
had encouraged her to study modern languages and
When we started this new feature last issue we couldn’t
She was the very first princess to give a speech on
even have begun to imagine the incredible stories that
women’s liberation in Morocco and became the
classical Arabic, the lingua franca of public discourse in the Arab world.
we would find as we started our search for
symbol of Moroccan independence and
Pioneers of Sport. The Late Princess Lalla
feminism. She called for equal rights for
Aicha is by no means an exception to this;
men and women, and for women’s right
she was an incredible force in the Arab
to vote. In 1957 Time Magazine featured
world not just for Golf but as symbol to
a photograph of Princess Lalla Aicha
the Moroccan people and to the world for
on its front cover, the only Moroccan
her diplomacy.
woman at that time to have been thus honoured. In the interview with Time
Princess Lalla Aicha was born in Rabat in
Magazine, Princess Lalla Aicha was
1930 to the Sultan (later king Mohammed
quoted as saying that she had not
V) and his wife Lalla Abla bint Tahar. The Princess
realised the impact her speech would make.
supported her father’s quest for independence and stood by him when he was deposed by the French
The Late Princess quickly became a symbol of Moroccan
in 1953 and exiled. In 1955 Sultan Mohammed V
independence and feminism. Nationalist leaders sent
successfully negotiated the gradual restoration of
their daughters off for a modern education, without a
Moroccan independence and returned to Morocco,
veil and others soon followed. She accompanied her
16 March 2015
Photo courtesy: Association du Trophee HassanII de Golf
March 2015 17
Photos courtesy: Ladies European tour
father in his inaugurations of public schools around the country and her name became associated with women’s emancipation. For this reason many schools were named after her. Princess Lalla Aicha was the first female Arab ambassador, holding several diplomatic positions in her time: Ambassador of Morocco to the United Kingdom (1965-1969), Greece (1969-1970) and Italy (1970-1973). In Britain, her example of female leadership in the Arab world continues: her niece, Princess Lalla Joumala, is the current Moroccan ambassador to the UK. Throughout her lifetime, she received many honours including Grand Cordon of the Order of the Throne of Morocco (1963), Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Italy (1970), Honorary Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (DCVO) (1980) and President of the Moroccan Red Crescent. She was also the honorary president of the National Union of Moroccan Women, amongst many other roles. “Late Princess Lalla Aicha, aunt of HM King Mohammed VI, was a pioneer of Moroccan women’s renaissance and a living and completed embodiment of the merger between the country’s authenticity and its aspirations to progress, modernity and civic mindedness.” Her Royal Highness late Princess Lalla Aicha was not only a keen golfer but she was hugely instrumental in the growth of women’s golf in Morocco and contributed enormously to its development. She participated in the Hassan II Golf Trophy and Lalla Meryem Cup since 18 March 2015
Photos courtesy: Ladies European tour
Photos courtesy: Ladies European tour
the 1970s and amazingly played 18 holes every day until she passed away on the 4th of September, 2011 at the age of 81. In 2012, the year after her death, the first edition of Lalla Aicha Tour School started. Association du Trophée Hassan II Golf (ATH) and the Ladies European Tour (LET) have developed a strong partnership with shared vision to grow participation and interest in women’s golf. The Ladies European Tour Qualifying School was renamed the Lalla Aicha Tour School in honour of Her Royal Highness Late Princess Lalla Aicha. What an incredible pioneer that has seen her legacy fulfilled in the LET Tour School and all the good it brings to golf not only in Morocco, but around the world. What a person she must have been to talk with. References: Responsible Communication, Association du Trophée Hassan II de Golf http://www.moroccoboard.com/viewpoint-5/124-zouhair-baghough-/5413morocco-princess-royal-lalla-aisha-dead-at-71 http://www.golftoday.co.uk/ladies_golf/2012/LET/let_school-morocco.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_Lalla_Aicha_of_Morocco http://www.ladiesontour.com/news-mobile/4659-lalla-aicha-tour-schoolextended-for-three-years http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/princess-lalla-aichawomensrights-activist-and-first-female-arab-ambassador-2370954.html
March 2015 19
Sports International Magazine Promotion
Photo credit: Huw Williams
A sponsors point of view The attraction of Women’s Cycling By Kelly Barnes
I will start by saying that I first met the Matrix Pro Cycling owner manager, Stefan Wyman at the Tour De
Yellow Jersey Cycle Insurance is a leading brand
France stage in London and was impressed by how
specialising in bicycle insurance for the enthusiast
passionate he was about women’s cycling and playing
market and a sponsor of Matrix Pro Cycling. Yellow
an active role in helping to develop the sport – not
Jersey alongside many other brands are capitalising
just his team. Meeting Stefan filled me with confidence
on the huge success of team GB cyclists and triathletes
about placing our marketing budget in a women’s
at London 2012. Post Olympics, the cycle industry has
cycling team.
seen a tremendous uplift and women’s cycling is fast becoming the strongest area for commercial growth
However...as a marketeer, it’s not all about seeing your
within cycling.
brands logo on the jersey of a pro cycling team – as impressive as that may be. With marketing budgets
Kelly Barnes, Yellow Jersey Cycle Insurance Head of
under pressure, all spend has to be accountable
Marketing, tells us why women’s cycling is an attractive
against KPI’s and generate a measurable return for
proposition for sponsors...
the business. That’s why I championed the decision
Why sponsor women’s cycling? 20 March 2015
to sponsor Matrix Pro Cycling. I’m a keen cyclist, a pretty slow triathlete and passionate about supporting
Photo credit: Huw Williams
women’s cycling, but it was commercial factors that
we can target not only women but also a large male
drove our sponsorship decision. For Yellow Jersey, it
audience who are interested in, and watch, top flight
provided a clear return on investment.
women’s cycling.
Yellow Jersey specialises in insurance for the mid to
I firmly believe that women’s cycling provides sponsors
higher end of the market (bicycles ranging from £1000
with unrivalled value across many areas. As part of our
right up to £30’000) and so we needed to reach an
sponsorship we receive a number of benefits which
audience who would own and ride this type of bicycle
spread across the whole marketing mix. The following
– we call this our enthusiast market. As a new brand
sponsorship elements provide Yellow Jersey with
the key for our marketing is brand awareness, product
multiple opportunities to reach, educate and engage
visibility and educating the enthusiast market about
our target audience:
why they need cycle insurance - and women’s cycling provides that marketing opportunity while offering us
Yellow Jersey cycle insurance logo placement in a
immense value for our marketing spend. From research
prominent position on the team jerseys is a big brand
we know that women’s cycling is a rapidly growing
awareness win for us.
sector within the enthusiast market and through our sponsorship of a British female professional team
Corporate days with the team allow us to engage March 2015 21
Sports International Magazine Promotion
Photo credit: Huw Williams
on a B2B level and provide a rewarding experience for our top affiliates (yellowjersey.co.uk/affiliates) VIP access to the team on race days allows us to engage with fans and our target market face to face. Logo and links on matrixprocycling.cc link back to our website and provides us with measurable SEO benefits. Media exposure via television and the press gives us large scale visibility. Marketing assets including imagery, video content, and rider blogs provide engaging content for our audience and drives traffic to our website. Personal appearances from the team/riders to support Yellow Jersey activity helps to build interest in our brand. A recent example of our activity at the London Bike Show. A corporate social responsibility channel for us to demonstrate our active involvement with promoting the development of women’s cycling and encouraging healthy, active role models for young women. 22 March 2015
Our key sponsorship benefits allow us to ultimately promote our cycle insurance product to our target market and a wider audience. Job done. Sponsorship – essential for growth in women’s cycling? Sponsorship plays a huge role in the progression of women’s cycling, without commercial investment the gulf between men’s and women’s cycling will be extremely difficult to bridge any time soon. An increase in tier one sponsors will undoubtedly help to grow women’s cycling - if large and international brands bring investment, this will impact on the level of the sport and in turn encourage increased media attention. Although the issue is that until women’s cycling is given equal media rights (bringing richer rewards for brands), larger sponsors may not see the value in placing their sponsorship budgets in women’s cycling. The development of women’s cycling must therefore be firmly placed in the hands of media and broadcasters who should commit to serving their audience with the content they wish to consume. With a rapidly growing women’s cycling market and superstars including Laura Trott, Nicole Cooke and Victoria Pendleton winning the hearts of the nation, there is no real argument why women’s cycling is not getting a better deal and more airtime from broadcasters. While professional women’s cycling is receiving more cover than before, there is still a way to go. Sponsors themselves have a role to play in promoting women’s cycling, by activating sponsorship deals the brands can use marketing campaigns and PR to highlight and bring added momentum to the sport, helping to encourage increased media and public interest. As a sponsor, Yellow Jersey plan to play our part in promoting women’s cycling by working closely with Matrix Pro Cycling and proudly help to develop the sport. To protect your passion visit Yellowjersey.co.uk and get an instant quote online.
March 2015 23
Invicta Fighting Championships – the birth of a new world Exclusive interview and article by Myak Homberger Women’s sport globally has many challenges with
case of boxing, see our other article in this issue).
some sports being better funded, or with more media coverage and attention than others. As well as this
MMA (mixed martial arts), cage fighting, UFC (ultimate
there is a huge disparity between the ‘haves’ and ‘have
fight club) are all terms used to describe a full-contact
not’ sports - and yet on top of all of this there are some
combat sport that allows the use of both striking
sports that have the challenge of not only showing
and grappling techniques, both standing and on the
the public it is right and acceptable for women to
ground; and that differentiates it from a variety of other
participate in these sports, but also legally (as in the
combat sports and martial arts.
24 March 2015
The sport has been an incredibly hard one to sell to people around the world for numerous reasons, and yet now it seems to finally be emerging from its dingy reputation into a sport that is being watched internationally, with women as the headline on male fight events and a respectability being brought to the sport. Step forward Shannon Knapp. Shannon has spent her life in the world of MMA on the mens side of things, working across all aspects, working for and with many of the big names that would be familiar to those who know the sport. When Zuffa, the parent company of the UFC, purchased its rival Strikeforce in 2011, Shannon had a number of conversations and calls from female fighters who were afraid of what the future might hold for them since the UFC had never promoted a women’s fight. As Shannon reflects “...women were scared, they were worried”. Much time was spent looking into the situation and researching what it would take to establish a women’s Photo courtesy: Invicta FC
Photo credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
March 2015 25
Photos credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
26 March 2015
Photos credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
March 2015 27
Photos credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
only MMA promotion and by her own admission there
The event was streamed live around the world for
was a great deal of negativity and many people who said
free to showcase what was happening, history in the
that a women’s only MMA promotion wouldn’t work.
making. As Shannon says, “...we wanted all to watch
Shannon laughs as she recalls those conversations.
and be involved and so it was all streamed free to
“Every time I told someone what I was going to do
start”. The event was a success and Invicta has grown
they laughed at me. They said I couldn’t do it.” But as
from strength to strength, with Invicta FC 11 just
she explains, “I love it when someone says that you
announced for the 27th of February 2015.
can’t, it’s just more motivation for me”. One of the things that has really impressed me in all Against the odds, on the 28th of April 2012 Invicta FC 1
the dealings and conversations with Shannon and
was held after a year in the making. Shannon was very
the team at Invicta FC is the total commitment to the
clear in her desire to use the word Invicta and in a way,
athletes, the sport and its global promotion. This is
it sums up both Shannon as a person and how she sees
refreshing to see in a sport where this so often doesn’t
things. The term Invicta, a Latin word for invincible and
happen. The feeling coming from all of the team is very
incomparable, was chosen as the promotion’s name
much one that the athlete comes first and that they are
since the terms invincible and incomparable are very
all there to promote and improve the sport they love.
masculine, but the term appears in the feminine form in Latin - and Shannon thought it was a good description
Talking with Shannon it is clear how passionate she is
for women’s MMA and what she was wanting to
about the athletes. “I am protective of the athletes,
achieve. She comments that “I had no idea if it would
I will fight for them and they can always call me,”
work, but it did and with a bang!”
she says of how she feels about them. In our long
28 March 2015
Photos credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
conversation this theme is interlinked with everything
to put on the best show and the best fights, you have
we talk about. This is not a sound bite for the media
to go find the best and they don’t always live in the
but how Shannon feels - and she has surrounded
USA.” She continues, saying that “...the best matches
herself with a like minded team. The interesting thing
around the world give the best opportunities”. Who
is that what is best for the athlete is also what is best for
could have said it any better?
the fans in the long term - and so it’s a smart business decision as well. So often promotions are built on a
Huge respect to Shannon for achieving what seemed
short term plan to bring in a lot of money, but Shannon
like an almost impossible job in creating a women’s
and Invicta Fighting Championships are marching to a
only promotion, one that is global and whose aim is to
different drum.
both serve the athletes and improve the sport. What a great ethos to have as a promotion.
As a global magazine the obvious thing for us is that we want to see true ‘global’ sports where athletes cross borders to compete and it’s exciting to hear that Shannon and Invicta FC feel the same. As Shannon said, “...if you make a commitment that you are going
Note: In January 2015 the Promotion beat the UFC by 4% of the community vote, winning the 2014 Best Promotion Award in the Awakening Fighters WMMA Awards. March 2015 29
Thailand Women’s Cricket Team A sporting success story from the Kingdom of smiles By Richard Lockwood
Thailand is not best known for playing cricket but
T20 Qualifier held in Ireland. Better things could
playing cricket and some wonderful grounds
has been chosen to host the next ICC Women’s
the country has had a long history of expatriates
have been developed both in the nation’s capital Bangkok and in the northern city of Chiang Mai.
In recent years Thailand’s women’s cricket team has put the country firmly on the cricketing map
still be ahead for the Thailand girls as Bangkok T20 Qualifier in November 2015 where home advantage could help them make their way into
the main World T20 competition which will be played in India next year.
by winning two Asian Cricket Council women’s
The beginning of this success story for Thailand
of themselves in the 2013 ICC Women’s World
cricket program that has been developed by
competitions and by giving a fantastic account
women’s cricket is to be found in the schools the
Cricket
Association
of
Thailand from the early 2000s.
Dedicated volunteers working for
organizations
such
as
Chiang Mai Schools Cricket Association
started
softball
cricket in the schools and
recent years has seen more concentration on hard ball
cricket and National Youth Championships are now held every year.
Cricket has become part of the
Sports Association of Thailand’s 30 March 2015
National Youth Games which Photos credit: Richard Lockwood
Photos credit: Richard Lockwood
gave cricket official status in Thailand with boys
and girls competitions involving provinces and late last year cricket took its place in the Senior Games as an official sport for the first time.
Girls from around the country now have the chance to go to school at CPP School in Doi Saket near Chiang Mai and at the new Rattanakosin
Cricket Academy near Bangkok and concentrate on practising cricket every day as well as to get a good education.
This pathway continues beyond school age as girls are sponsored to go to college and university
and several of the players now work full time March 2015 31
32 March 2015
Photos credit: Richard Lockwood
March 2015 33
with the Cricket Association of Thailand and are
Thailand finished with an encouraging win against
they will be fully involved in the next National
won the previous ACC Women’s Championship
fully trained coaches, umpires and scorers and Youth Games in March. The women’s team also
plays against men’s team in the Bangkok Cricket League so the youngsters and the older players can be involved in cricket on a full time basis.
Hong Kong winning by 8 runs. Hong Kong had so it was another step in the right direction.
A trip of a lifetime for the Thai girls as they
qualified for the ICC Women’s World Twenty20
The Cricket Association of Thailand’s efforts began to pay dividends at ACC U-19 Women’s
Championship held in Thailand in 2008 where the girls finished third and the senior matched that achievement by beating Nepal in thrilling
fashion in the ACC Women’s T20 Championship held in Kuwait in 2011.
The introduction of cricket at the 16th Asian Games held at Guanggong International Cricket
Stadium in Guangzhou in 2010 gave Thailand’s women some wider international exposure as
they played in a group with Pakistan, Malaysia and China. Results were mixed as they lost to
Pakistan by eight wickets, beat Malaysia by 31 runs and narrowly lost to China by one run.
Qualifier in Ireland in July 2013 and the team again surpassed all expectations. They won
three of their five matches in the competition. Although they just missed out on the semi-finals by losing to Zimbabwe in their last group match, victory over the same opposition in the Shield
final meant they had won their second trophy of
the year. Thailand could be delighted with their performance in this important competition. The
team
convincingly
won
the
Shield
competition and Thailand were now ranked
as high as twelfth place in women’s 20-over cricket which is an outstanding achievement.
The country of Thailand could be proud of their
women’s team which had put the country very Thailand’s next major competition saw them
take part in the Women’s T20 Asia Cup also held
much on the cricketing map.
in Guangzhou in October 2012. It was the first
The icing on the cake for Thailand came as they
competition with the four main Asian countries.
Asian Cricket Council and then they also won the
time that the country’s team had taken part in a
34 March 2015
were named as women’s team of the year by the International Cricket Council’s women’s award to
more matches against this standard of opposition if they are to progress further and their chance
will come as Bangkok will stage the next edition of the ICC Women’s World Twenty20 Qualifier in November 2015.
Two of the bodies that should get great credit
for supporting junior cricket development are
the Chiang Mai International Cricket Sixes which is an annual tournament now in its 28th year
Photos credit: Richard Lockwood
complete a wonderful year for Thailand’s women cricketers.
which makes an annual donation to junior cricket
every year and the Chiang Mai Schools Cricket Alliance (CMSCA) which has paid for coaches
Thailand’s women’s cricket team took to the world stage again, as they competed in the women’s 20-over cricket competition in the
to work in the schools for the last 15 years and holds regular Sawasdee Cricket tournaments.
Asian Games which was held in Incheon, South
For more information about Thailand women’s
Korea where they were hoping to win a medal.
cricket see: www.lannacricket.org
Pakistan went on to retain their Asian Games
The Cricket Association of Thailand and Asian
Bangladesh in the final. Thailand need to play
and facebook pages.
women’s
cricket
title
as
they
overcame
Cricket Council also both have their own websites
Photos credit: Richard Lockwood
March 2015 35
“Move over, Darling
...the girls are here� Photos courtesy: Aintree Racecourse
36 March 2015
� March 2015 37
By Harriet Rochester A HUNDRED YEARS AGO, a feminist’s attempt to promote the cause of votes for women resulted in her tragic death in the Epsom Derby. The suffragette Emily Davison was fatally injured after throwing herself under the King’s horse Anmer. No single event in the years of campaigning drew as much attention
last November. Lizzie is one of the country’s most promising conditional jump jockeys. Yet despite her achievements and those of such as Lucy Alexander, women are still under- represented on the racetrack, particularly in jump racing. One statistic of concern is the lack of conversion of female stable staff to jockeys. At the UK’s Northern Racing College, seven
or sympathy, and within ten years, women had the vote. Horseracing was the stage for a women’s rights breakthrough, but generations later, has it provided women with a level playing field? Not yet, but women are making headway on the racecourse and in the C-suites. Analyze the diversity within horseracing today and the outlook is refreshing. Alongside a Lord you can find industrialists, farmers and postmen admiring their racehorse in the paddock. Strenuous efforts by racecourses and centrally by Great British Racing, the promotional arm of the sport, are being made to market race-going to a broader and younger demographic, including young women, via fixtures with music and ladies days as examples. British horseracing offers plenty of female role models, particular in the training ranks. Two of the last six winners of the Grand National were trained by women - Venetia Williams (2009) and Sue Smith (2013), and in that time, fifty per cent of winners at Grade 1 Saturday fixtures were trained by women. Plenty of talent has emerged among female jockeys, too. Following in the footsteps of international role models like Emma-Jayne Wilson and Julie Krone, Hayley Turner became the first woman to win a British Group 1 race outright in 2011 and a year later Amy Ryan was the first to win the apprentice jockey’s title. “They’re only men sitting on horses,” said 21 year old Lizzie Kelly after beating top jockey Richard Johnson 38 March 2015 Photos courtesy: Aintree Racecourse
out of 10 youngsters on the stable staff foundation
will admit she (or he) accepts the risk in return for the
course are women – but on the apprentice jockeys’
‘buzz’ of race-riding.
course, the proportions are reversed.
“Men ride a stronger a finish” is sometimes dusted
This could be danger-driven; the racecourse is only
off as a trainer’s pretext for favouring a male jockey
workplace where two ambulances follow the payroll
booking. It’s the soft option; there are plenty of
as it goes about its daily routine. However, any jockey
examples where women riders are as effective as
March 2015 39
men. In Eventing, an equestrian sport where the
John Baker of the Jockey Club’s north-west region
cross-country phase has similarities to race riding,
racecourses recognises that female jockeys deserve
nine of the top 20 British-based riders are female.
more opportunities. In 2011, he introduced Carlisle
“We need to ensure we treat every individual on merit rather than preconceptions,” says Steve Harman,
racecourse’s Ultimate Ladies Night, the only fixture in the world where all the jockeys riding are women.
chairman of the British Horseracing Authority (BHA).
“We wanted to add a new dimension to Carlisle’s
“We’re running training programmes for jockeys, with
traditional ladies night. How better than staging an
‘jockey coaches’ providing mentoring and guidance,
exclusive opportunity for lady jockeys to showcase
equally to young male and female jockeys.”
their talent? It’s important for horseracing that
One feature of British racing’s treatment of lady jockeys is worth a salute: on the flat and over jumps, men and women are paid the same riding fees. Set against females regarded as second-class citizens in many other sports, that’s something for British racing to be proud about.
40 March 2015
we nurture female role models – and that’s in management as well as on the track.”
Examine the business side of horseracing, and women
from the top, and the BHA’s new appointments
appear to have been left in the stalls, particularly
are good. All parties engaged in the sport need to
at senior level. Change is in the air, however. In
evolve into more gender-balanced organisations,
December, the BHA moved to balance their board
with at least 30 per cent – as a start – of boards and
by appointing six new non-executive directors, three
executive directors made up of qualified women”.
men and three women. “There’s proof everywhere
On Twitter, Helen Grant, the UK’s sports minister,
that more diverse businesses are more successful,”
also tweeted her approval.
Steve Harman points out.
Aintree’s ladies day has been labeled by the UK’s
Sally Rowley-Williams, founder and chair of Women in
tabloid press as more about partying than the
Racing, and organisation supporting women’s careers
horse, but this year Rose Paterson, chairman and
in the sport, hails the move: “Change needs to start
first lady chair of a UK racecourse, together with
Photos courtesy: Aintree Racecourse
March 2015 41
Women in Racing, will host the first Grand Women’s Summit, featuring a panel from horseracing and other sports. John Baker explains that the summit, “recognises the importance of women in sport and business.” So what next? Katie Walsh is tipped to become the first woman to win the ultimate test of horse and jockey – the Grand National. She finished third in 2013 riding Seabass, the best result so far by any
Note: Steve Harman and Rose Paterson will join the
female.
panel at the Grand Women’s Summit followed by a
Not only would a woman piloting a Grand National winner be worldwide news, and a coup for inspiring women in sport, but @geoffbanksbet offered me 25/1 against a female jockey to win this year’s event. I’ll
walk of the Grand National course with Katie Walsh, on Ladies Day of the Grand National festival, 10 April 2015. For further information www.womeninracing. co.uk
take that, thank you - as well as any other wager on women featuring at the head of British horseracing’s future.
Photos courtesy: Carlisle Racecourse
42 March 2015
GRAND WOMEN’S SUMMIT FRIDAY 10 APRIL LADIES DAY at THE CRABBIE’S GRAND NATIONAL FESTIVAL Be a part of the first ever Grand Women’s Summit hosted by Aintree Racecourse and Women in Racing, with an excellent panel of speakers including: DR DENISE BARRETTBAXENDALE MBE BETH TWEDDLE MBE ROSE PATERSON STEVE HARMAN Plus, a course walk around the iconic Grand National Fences with KATIE WALSH Tickets cost £70 for Women in Racing members and £99 for guests. Includes Champagne reception and breakfast, The Grand Women’s Summit, course walk with Katie Walsh, raceday admission to Ladies Day in the Earl of Derby and Lord Sefton enclosures. Men and women welcome. For information and to book visit
www.womeninracing.co.uk
March 2015 43
Photos courtesy: Invicta FC
Shannon Knapp President and Founder of Invicta Fighting Championships 44 March 2015
Exclusive interview and article by Myak Homberger “The reason Invicta is here is because there is a need for it, to provide opportunity and make sport better,” is part of Shannon Knapp’s opening gambit as we sit to discuss her, MMA (mixed martial arts) and Invicta Fighting Championships, the only global women’s MMA promotion, founded by her. The interesting thing is that all of the interview with Shannon could be distilled into those opening words. She is as passionate as the best, but it’s a lot more than passion. It’s a total, unwavering belief in what she is doing and the desire to improve the sport and the platform for the athletes. As Shannon says, “I came in thinking I could make a difference. They needed a platform and someone to roll their sleeves up and get involved.” And that is what she did and what is driving her like a sandstorm to do it. The politics of combative sports, in particular Boxing and MMA, can be huge. When I asked Shannon how she deals with the politics, she didn’t hesitate with her answer. “I don’t get involved in politics, its black and white, I don’t have time for it.” I found her reasoning interesting: by getting involved in politics “...you’re taking effort away from where it belongs. You are taking focus away from what’s important.” It’s great to Photo credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
March 2015 45
see influential people being so clear on matters like
heard regarding how she is with the athletes and
this.
the level of care she gives them, it clearly is second
This is a notoriously tough industry and one that has
nature to her, just part of what she does.
not welcomed women very easily, so setting up and
The first is that she spends one on one time with each
having a successful women’s only promotion was like
athlete getting to know them. As she then explains,
pushing water uphill on every level for Shannon, but
“...for me it’s about having conversations about
she tackled each issue with the charm and steel that
what they want and their dreams.” Shannon wants
her grandmother taught her. As she regales, “...my
athletes in Invicta who are clear on what they want
grandma used to say you can catch more bees with
and where they are going, but also so that she can
honey than vinegar”.
help them grow and develop to their potential. And if
“The reason Invicta is here is because there is a need for it, to provide opportunity and make sport better,” What sets Shannon apart is an unwavering set of principles that ensures there is no compromise and these are: • A desire to see the sport grow • No exit clause in the contracts of her athletes (if you are here it’s cause you will be loyal) • To be a platform for female fighters • To provide opportunity • Create and provide depth to the sport • Exposure for the sport and athletes • Put on the best show and the best fights • Proud, respectful and pleased with what they are doing for the sport • Athletes come first These nine principles may seem obvious, but the world is full of stories to prove this is far from the norm. For Shannon however, it is the norm and anything else is not an option. I asked Shannon about some of the stories that I have 46 March 2015
this means them leaving Invicta FC at a point and she believes this is right for them, she won’t stand in their way. She wants committed but happy athletes and going about it this way really engages the athletes. Second, and this may sound simple and obvious but it isn’t, multiple pregnancy tests are done minutes before a fight. This may seem late, maybe it should be done a week before or even as some promotions do, leave it to the fighter to sort out, but for Invicta FC it’s about the best possible care and if a test was done a week before that could have changed, and multiple tests also ensure that one isn’t inaccurate. Shannon’s motivation is that she cares about the athletes and this is her chance to, as she says, “... make a difference”. In doing these sorts of things Shannon is gaining huge loyalty and thankfulness from athletes who would have never had the opportunities had she not created them. As Shannon excitedly describes this, she says”...you know how gratifying it is when
Photo credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
athletes turn up with that sparkle in their eyes and they are so happy to be there? That’s why I do it.” For Shannon this is what it’s all about and she is buzzing, you can just hear how excited she is and how she can see a dream becoming a reality as these athletes get opportunities and a platform they never had before but which they now have. The interesting thing in all of my time with Shannon is that money hardly comes up and doesn’t feature in the conversation. For Shannon this is about everything but. As she explains, “...it’s not about money, it never has been, everything is about making the sport better.” And that’s it. Simple as that, Shannon is on a quest, a mission and it’s about doing the right thing
started talking about her struggles. These are not the struggles I would have assumed before I met her but ones that make perfect sense now I understand more about her. As Shannon explained “..my biggest struggle has been the responsibility I feel for the athletes.” This theme continues as she explains her
and not about the money.
desire to do the best for the athletes both on and off
This is further illustrated perfectly when Shannon
make Invicta FC a success, a fear that if she doesn’t
the fight scene - and that this is what drives her to March 2015 47
manage to do so, all the athletes would have nothing
improve the sport and the athletes who love to do
and nowhere to go. This admission says so much
what they do. Is this not what those that went before
about the person that Shannon is as well as so much
us and those that compete out of a love for the sport
about what she isn’t.
thought and felt when they invented these sports, the
Invicta is not about a promotion business for Shannon Knapp, it’s about making a choice to be counted, standing up and being a pioneer in a sport, it’s about
desire to improve a sport? Well, Invicta and Shannon have nailed it and you would be hard pressed to find anyone more passionate.
wanting to change an industry for good and to improve the lot of the athlete. It is plain to see and hear not only the passion but the love of the sport that Shannon has and it is this that motivates her. “That’s what this is about, providing opportunity and giving back to a sport that has given me growth, years of development and enjoyment. I love this sport”. These aren’t merely words - you can sense the emotion and the conviction she speaks with and this is what makes her so special: her motivation is to
48 March 2015
Photo credit: Esther Lin, Invicta FC
Sylvia Neid,
manager of the German Football Team
Photo courtesy: FIFA
By Myak Homberger This is your third time as coach for the World Cup, how do you feel going into this competition? Every tournament is a challenge and very special. I am really looking forward to the World Cup in Canada. Since the last World Cup what areas of the team do you think have improved most? The international Women’s Football keeps improving and so it has for years. The quality on the pitch has grown, technically and tactically as well as athletically. The team is one of the most successful in the world what do you think is it is that makes them successful? On the one hand, the German FA (DFB) has supported women’s football March 2015 49
Photos credit: Myroslava Terlecky
50 March 2015
for years. In Germany we have excellent conditions to improve our sport, with a good structure and an outstanding youth and talent development. On the other hand we have the Allianz Frauen-Bundesliga with its TopClubs, so that the players perform on a high level. You have blended experience with youth very well how do you ensure the young are focused on the game rather than playing and training with their heros? Of course the young players have a lot of respect playing together with their role models for the first time. But the experienced players take away their anxiety very fast, because we see ourselves as one team and we do live the teamspirit. That was one of the reasons why we became European Champion in 2013 with such a young team. The team only conceded 4 goals in qualifying but scored 62, this is a very impressive record but also that you have done this for two
“As a coach you have to bear responsibility. Indeed you are part of a team, but in the end it is your job to make a decision on your own responsibility.”
World Cups. Some teams are happy to qualify with draws and losses, you clearly don’t, why is this? We could not take it for granted that we win all the matches. We went in all matches with a high level of concentration and respect for our opponent. That was a mental challenge and we did very well with the brilliant results. Injuries have been a challenge in the
past and yet your bench has supplied you with very good alternatives, is the injury situation a concern to you? With Lena Lotzen, Saskia Bartusiak and Nadine Keßler we have three important players who are still injured. At the 2013 EURO we had to change numerous positions because of injured players. Every coach worries about player injury, because it is important to go through a tournament healthy to be successful. You are one of the most successful and well known coaches in the world, what is it that has made you who you are? I learned a lot by Gero Bisanz, the first women’s national coach. Although March 2015 51
Photo credit: Myroslava Terlecky
I learned a lot by Tina Theune in my years as Assistant-
As a coach you have to bear responsibility. Indeed
Coach. The experiences with those wonderful
you are part of a team, but in the end it is your job to
headcoaches have influenced me a lot.
make a decision on your own responsibility.
What is it that makes you get up in the morning,
What is the difference for you between playing and
what motivates you?
coaching?
I love my job, the sport and the big challenge coaching
As a player you can live your emotions rather than as
a national team. On top of that it is a lot of fun to
a coach.
work with the players.
How do you keep the teams’ feet on the ground
Regarded as one, if not the best German player
when they are so good and a definite contender to
ever was coaching the obvious next step for you?
lift the cup? To keep their focus?
Yes it was.
I am very happy to have such intelligent players who
Many women talk of the challenge of transition from player to career after playing, how was the transition for you and what were the challenges?
52 March 2015
know exactly that we have to go step by step to be successful. My team is modest and focused and not so arrogant to believe that they win a big tournament for granted.
Do you feel any pressure based on your past
You are one of only 7 female coaches at this World
success?
Cup, what would your message be to aspiring
As a German team you are always under pressure of expectations. But you have to work hard for such a
female coaches? Dare!
situation and we did by being successful. So for us it is not a new situation. How do you motivate your players? It is important to find the right words and the right tone. When the team is under pressure what do you say to them at half time? How do you handle things?
Photo courtesy: FIFA
It depends on the situation. You always have to try to find the right words and the best decision.
March 2015 53
“I think sports gave me the first place where this awkward girl could feel comfortable in my own skin. I think that’s true for a lot of women—sports gives you a part of your life where you can work at something and you look in the mirror and you like that person.” Teri McKeever (first woman to serve as the head coach of a U.S. Olympic swimming team)
SPORTS
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International 54 March 2015
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Are you looking to develop leadership or teamwork skills within your workforce Would your company benefit from increasing the number of or developing existing or potential female leaders
We can help using our resource of Inspiring female speakers and Inspiring and expert associates. www.inspiringwomen.co.uk catherine@inspiringwomen.co.uk
March 2015 55
56 March 2015 Photos: Ryan Ashburn / Skaters Beverly Flood & Cassie Oseguera
Exclusive interview and article by Myak Homberger Every now and then you stumble across something different, exciting and something that really resonates with you. When I came across the “Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word” (GN4LW) website and campaign I was very keen to understand what it was as there seemed so many components to it, so when I spoke to Founder Cindy Whitehead I was not disappointed at all. GN4LW was born out of Cindy’s experiences in the 70’s being one of the leading pro-skateboarders in a very male world. By the time she was sixteen, Cindy had become one of the top female professional vert skateboarders. With this backdrop Cindy explains to me what the phrase means. “Girl is often used as a slur as in ‘you skate pretty good... for a GIRL’ or when you hear people say things like ‘Steve, you throw like a GIRL.’ Those are instances of people using
March 2015 57
the female gender as a putdown. A 4 letter word is
delivered the goods. People can promote the
also known as a cuss word. So ‘Girl is NOT a 4 Letter
message and still feel cool, something that is often
Word’ covers those bases and makes it known that
overlooked.
the word GIRL is neither.”
Dwindle Inc/Dusters California and XS Helmets have
This is an incredibly powerful message that Cindy
both seen Cindy’s vision and they are working with
has harnessed and in so doing created the GN4LW
GN4LW in a ground breaking way. Yes, it’s about
campaign. The way Cindy has approached things is
companies that understand the mission - but Cindy
unique, creating a clothing line as well as agreeing a
is very clear that this isn’t just a shelf filler and being
couple of collaborations that make real commercial
seen to be ‘doing something for girls’, but that there
sense as well as complementing her vision, and a
has to be real sales from it and it needs to work for
slogan/logo that makes a statement. The clothing
both parties. Cindy expanded on her view of the
range is so far removed from the heat pressed-
companies she is working with, saying that “..the
one-colour-tees you so often see and given Cindy’s
companies I chose to be involved with are not doing
background, you would expect no less.
this as a vanity project; they are in it for all the right
Cindy explained the concept behind her range: “... because people who didn’t even skate liked the
reasons and working with me to create a product that is both functional and geared for women”.
message and wanted t-shirts, as did the skater girls”.
However, it doesn’t stop there (and this is the bit I
This is the key: people liked the message and wanted
find exciting) - as part of a collaborative project with
to buy into it - and for any campaign capturing
GN4LW the companies have to join in giving back to
the imagination is key. Cindy has realized that and
the sport that gave so much to Cindy. For Dusters
58 March 2015
“...people who didn’t even skate liked the message and wanted t-shirts, as did the skater girls”.
Photo: Todd Fuller / Skater Minna Stess
March 2015 59
Photos courtesy :GN4LW/Ian Logan
Photo: Todd Fuller / Skater Beverly Flood
60 March 2015
Photo: Ian Logan / Skater Cassie Oseguera
March 2015 61
that means Cindy selected a female based non-profit organization that helps girls in skateboarding and Dusters donate a portion of the sales of each board to them; XS Helmets will be donating a bunch of the GN4LW helmets to a non-profit that helps kids in inner cities learn to skate. When I asked Cindy how she talks these companies round, she said “You need to connect with women and girls, be involved in ALL aspects of the project and really be 100% excited about what you are doing and those around you (like the big companies) will be onboard”. So this ticks every box: the companies are involved because they see the vision, they are getting sales because people love the message and they are giving back with each sale and the message is spread further. What a result! Photo: GN4LW / Skater Kyra Williams
WOMEN’S SPORT TRUST
photo credit: Andy Hooper/Daily Mail
WORKS TO: • RAISE VISIBILITY • PROMOTE ROLE MODELS • INCREASE MEDIA COVERAGE • IMPROVE FUNDING OF WOMEN’S SPORT
62 March 2015
GET INVOLVED
womenssporttrust.com @WomenSportTrust @Sport_Beautiful
The logo for GN4LW has again been thought out very clearly, as Cindy explained: “my thoughts were, there is nothing that says a girl can’t like pink and also be totally kick ass. I honed in on the idea of a pink heart
Period”. No one can argue with that! What I like is that it is such a strong message that is in no way diluted or ashamed, yet not sensational and
and doing the edgy lettering to balance it out. We also felt that the three colors (pink, gold & black) all worked well together.” This theme continued as I asked Cindy about her views for GN4LW and athletes. She says “...we are all athletes, but yes, we are female. There is no denying that. But I think we are all on the same path here – people should never say things like “you are good for a GIRL.” It should be “you are good at what you do” PERIOD. For example, when Alana Smith did a backflip on the mini mega ramp in South Africa Photo: Benedetto / Skater Zoe Benedetto
very importantly, it is commercial as well. Commercial in the sense people want to wear it and use it and a project that the companies see the benefit of fiscally as well. Cindy is giving so much of her time to GN4LW because she believes in helping women & girls get visibility and get ahead in whatever they choose to do, and because she wants to give back to a sport that she feels has given her so much. As she says “I feel that skateboarding has done a lot for me. Being a female skater among mostly guys, gave me strength, confidence, and motivation and I feel that has helped me so much in my career as a stylist and in life”. Photo: Ian Logan / Skater Beverly Flood
this past year she was the only girl in that event and the first girl to accomplish this move on a mega in competition – but at the end of the day she is a PERSON who had the balls to do an insanely hard trick on a huge ramp.” A trick so hard it would scare most people rigid. Yet, Cindy adds, “...she pulled it off flawlessly – she won first place and it was well
It may have started as a skateboard focused mission given Cindy’s history, but it is already changing - so watch this space and see where this goes because this a great vehicle to promote girls and women in sport with a logo and slogan that’s fantastic and says so much of todays culture as well as challenging a lot of misconceptions head on.
deserved. No one (that I know of) has ever said ‘wow, that was good... for a girl’. It’s frigging amazing. March 2015 63
Matrix Fitness
Team launch, training and start of the season By Steff Wyman The final approach to the season is a hectic time behind the scenes. There are so many moving parts in a professional team and ensuring each of those potentially vital factors have a firm tick next to them involves making lists, many many lists. Another part of this is surrounding the team with good people that you can trust to work alone and communicate all needs and wants back to the team. We need to do all we can to ensure the first impressions we make on and off the bike are positive and lasting. You don’t get many chances to impress, so taking care of the details off the bikes hopefully helps lead to success on it. The final element of the pre-season routine for Matrix Fitness is the team launch. This year that’s to be held at Staffs Uni, in Stoke on Trent. We 64 March 2015
Photos credit: Huw Williams
Photos credit: Huw Williams
are launching a partnership with them that will form a major part of our Sports Science Strategy for the season. The step up to professional level isn’t about simply doing more training; it’s about improvement in all areas and leaving no stone unturned. We might be a small team, but we have to do everything possible within our budget to emulate the very best. We will be racing against the biggest teams, the best riders, in the hardest races. We can’t do that unprepared and still have any expectations of gaining results. The purpose of the team launch is different for all teams, but the general theme is to present the team to cycling fans and media. We use the opportunity to complete a full photo shoot with the team, meet with sponsors, and commence our video content. For a team like ours, with a diverse range of riders and ambitions, this launch is most likely the only time that all riders and all staff will be in the same place at the same time during the year. In an ideal world that situation would be very different, and a lack of face-to-face contact does make forming good
Photos credit: Huw Williams
March 2015 65
Photos credit: Huw Williams
66 March 2015
understandings of each other pretty difficult, but you have to work with the cards your dealt. Women’s Cycling is rapidly growing, budgets are increasing in line with the increased media and prestigious races on offer, so I can see a time on the horizon where we’ll be together as a team far more often. Staffs Uni will be assisting us with regular lab testing of the riders, performance analysis and even sports psychology support. On that front, the team has also engaged Jack Blake (Sports psychologist) to work with the team throughout 2015 as the teams’ sports psychologist. He will be travelling to events with us to ensure riders have the best possible input to the their race preparation, and will also be working with the staff on the team to ensure all communication pathways are optimal for the specific athletes we are working with. This will be a huge step forward for the team and one we hope can help close the gap to the front of the peloton.
Photos credit: Huw Williams
The winter months in the Northern Europe seem to drag on and just as the weather improves it takes a dip for the worst again. This can add frustration and stress to a rider’s routine as we approach the first event of the season. Each rider deals with it differently, and when you add a sprinkle of inevitable
The step up to professional level isn’t about simply doing more training; it’s about improvement in all areas and leaving no stone unturned.
sickness over the winter, it’s really important to make sure everyone gets the support they need. Our first race will be Omloop het Nieuswblad in Belgium, a major classic, with
cobbles, shorts hills, and generally the bitter cold wind of Flanders. Everyone in the team is nervously excited for the event and I’m sure there will be more than a few sighs of relief once it’s out of the way. We had the core of our team down in Limoux for a second training camp during January and February. The training was tough, but the weather was better than the home locations for the riders and certainly March 2015 67
Photos credit: Huw Williams
more consistent. The training program set by team coach James Spragg, was far more specific than the earlier camps. This trip included a lot of team time trial efforts, which serve several purposes. Firstly, team time trials are vital when they appear in a stage race; we need to keep our leaders in contention. Secondly, they are a similar effort to working in a break, or even chasing a break back that we happened to miss. Finally, they help the team bond on the bike, and encourage constructive communication about how we can work better as a team. Living in a group environment, when the personalities have been blended correctly in team selection, should lead to a good bond off the bike. But transferring that onto the bike, in an intense situation, isn’t always a natural thing. For some riders, joining a team like Matrix Fitness will be their first real introduction to team work as a cyclist, where they are being relied upon to be a vital piece of a well oiled chain. 68 March 2015
But with only really days to go until the season starts I think we can be sure we’ve done all that we have in our power to help our riders hit the cobbles confident they are better riders than they were when they hung their bikes up at the end of last season. As always in early races we’ll be looking at performance over results, but so far, thanks to a huge team of people off the bike, we can be proud of what we’ve achieved.
Photos credit: Huw Williams
March 2015 69
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www.rugbyspy.com
www.facebook.com/RugbySpy
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“I’m strong, I’m tough, I still wear my eyeliner.” - Lisa Leslie (Basketball)
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O U T S TA N D I N G
AT H L E T E Kelly Smith – Footballing legend By Myak Homberger I had the privilege of spending time with Kelly a
couple of days before she announced that she was retiring and thus her last international interview.
Kelly has impacted Football both in England and
abroad in a phenomenal way and has been at the forefront of a seismic shift in women’s football.
• part of Team GB at the London Olympics 2012 • in Arsenal’s ‘Quadruple’ winning season of 2006– 07, Kelly scored 30 goals in 34 games since 2005; she appeared in 5 different competitions making a total of 112 appearances and 100 goals. Kelly started this journey in style on 1 November 1995, three days after turning 17. The 1-1 draw against Italy
Born and raised in Watford, Kelly reached 117
saw her win Player of the Match from her position
time record goal scorer in September 2010, when she
the occasion of her second cap, against Croatia on 19
and surpassing the previous record of 40 goals held
first World Cup goal that she scored against Japan,
46 goals.
relived the moment. “We had tried to qualify for 12
Kelly’s list of achievements is huge:
out and score (big smile) was amazing.”
• awarded an MBE in 2008
What makes Kelly more of a remarkable athlete is that
international appearances and became England’s all
on the left wing. Her first international goal came on
scored her 41st international goal against Switzerland
November 1995. But her favourite memory is of her
by Karen Walker, finishing her career with a record
as she told me with a real sparkle in her eye as she
• featured in the top five of the FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year rankings four times • played in 4 UEFA European championships winning a silver medal • played in 2 FIFA World Cups 72 March 2015
years and we did, after all that dreaming. So to come
she has been dogged with injuries her whole career
and yet she has achieved so much - it is a credit to her dedication and focus. As she said to me, “...you have to have a hunger” - and it’s this hunger that saw her
through recovery each time and made her the person and athlete she is today.
Photos courtesy: Getty Images/The FA
March 2015 73
Photos courtesy: Getty Images
74 March 2015
s/The FA
The mark of a legend and a world class athlete is when their peers speak out about them. Having spent many years in the USA plying a successful
career there, former United States head coach April Heinrichs asserted that Kelly would have been an automatic choice for the United States
Women’s National Team if she had been eligible. Vera Pauw, the Dutch coach, called Kelly “the best player in the World” after she scored a hat-trick against the Netherlands in a 2007 FIFA Women’s World Cup qualifier. Regarded by many as the best footballer ever, Mia Hamm said of Kelly, “I remember the first time I saw Kelly play. She’d just graduated
from Seton Hall. She’s incredibly technical, with great speed of thought and play. Her touch is different class – everything’s clean everything’s with
a purpose. The pace of her passes is always perfect and she can score March 2015 75
at will too.” Great praise from those around her and
a mark of what people thought of her international career.
We talked a lot about Kelly’s awareness of being a
role model and the importance of doing the right
thing - and you can’t but help but respect and admire an athlete who despite all she has done and achieved, wants to talk about the next generation and role
models. For Kelly this is what is more important, not talking about herself.
Kelly Smith is one of those players who come along
only once a generation and if she was a man you would be talking about Maradona or Messi: a player
with a unique talent - and that’s what Kelly has given to football. So we wish her well with her future and thank her for what she has given to the beautiful
game. It was a privilege to spend time with Kelly
and get to know her a bit. A remarkable athlete and humble human being.
KELLY SMITH
Congratulations to ... Kelly Smith
our outstanding sportswoman! We’re proud supporters of women’s sport around the world!
Visit a Spur Restaurant and try our mouth-watering steaks,perfectly basted ribs, crisp salads, delicious burgers and flame-grilled chicken! Check out our awesome weekday specials and our store locator at:
76 March 2015
Years of phenomenal growth FIFA decided to stage the first FIFA Women’s World Cup™ in 1991 (China PR) to give the best female players in world football the opportunity to play on a world stage, thus marking a milestone for the growth of women’s football all around the globe. Around half a million spectators attended the matches. Since then, the women’s game has taken huge strides forward in every aspect, whether in terms of the players’ technique, physical fitness and tactics, or the media coverage, TV viewers and sponsorship interest. One of the pillars of FIFA’s mission is to touch the world through our tournaments. We take great pride in staging these entertaining and unique festivals of football across the globe. The FIFA Women’s World Cup™ is a shining example of our commitment to ensuring that women’s football goes from strength to strength in the future.
March 2015 77
Match balls over the years With thanks to Adidas and FIFA for information and images It’s amazing the amount of research and time taken to develop the next World Cup ball, but Adidas have done a great job over the years, here is a quick history. Did you know women didn’t always have their own football?
78 March 2015
Photos courtesy: Adidias
2015
The adidas conext15 Official Match Ball will replace the hugely successful Brazuca as the Adidas official match ball for the FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015. The conext15 features a new design inspired by the elements of nature: earth, wind & fire. This is the most tested ball ever by Adidas, involving a process lasting over two and a half years and involving more than 600 of the world’s top players and 30 teams in 10 countries
2011 2007 2003 1999
across three continents, ensuring that it is suited to all conditions. Speedcell was the Adidas official match ball for the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2011™. ‘SPEEDCELL’ stands for speed, power and team spirit. The Match Ball for the 2007 FIFA Women’s World Cup featured the same performance characteristics as the adidas +Teamgeist, the Match Ball of the FIFA World Cup 2006. The design is inspired by the event logo and the traditional Chinese colors red and blue. Adidas’s Fevernova™ soccer ball was the official ball of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2003. This was the first World Cup Match Ball since 1978 to break with the traditional Tango design introduced in 1978. Engineered to the same specifications as the Equipment Tricolore (the Official Match ball of World Cup France 98’), the Adidas Equipment Icon was FIFA’s Official Matchball for the Women’s World Cup in 1999. This ball was the first one designed specifically for the Women’s World Cup. The Equipment Icon’s design features colorful “icons” from the eight venue cities of Women’s World Cup 99’. These icons are integrated into the Adidas “Tango” pattern, with an overlay of stars in honour of the US
1995 1991
flag. 1995: Questra was the the Adidas official match ball of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 1995, this ball was from the previous year’s FIFA World Cup 1994. 1991: Etrusco was the the Adidas official match ball of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 1991, this ball was from the previous year’s FIFA World Cup 1990.
March 2015 79
BE part of thE
World rugBy WomEn’s sEvEns sEriEs
2014/2015
London
may 15-16 2015
5 4
3
atLanta, uSa
6
amStErdam may 22-23 2015
march 14-15, 2015
1
Langford, Canada
dubai, uaE
december 4-5, 2014
april 18-19, 2015
2
SÃo PauLo, braZiL february 7-8, 2015
worldrugby.org 80 March 2015
@Worldrugby7s
“Age is no barrier. It’s a limitation you put on your mind.” - Jackie Joyner-Kersee
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82 March 2015
Photos cred
dit: Papaya Photography
UNSUNG
HERO Jimmy Rogers Basketball Coach Doing this job means that I get the privilege of meeting and spending time with people like Jimmy Rogers, listening to their stories and learning from such incredible people. Jimmy Rogers started playing Basketball in the 1950’s and was the only black person playing competitively in England. By the early 1980’s, having had a short successful playing career, Jimmy set up Brixton Topcats in an underprivileged area of London. As Jimmy recalls the instant success “... it was way more than I imagined, it was jammed every Sunday and not just with kids wanting to play but with support”. Thirty four years later and this one club, started by one man, has produced more basketball players and alumni than any other club in England and all from a deprived area. The list is remarkable of those that have gone on to do more, thanks to the impact Jimmy has had on their lives. These include Lou Deng NBA Hall of Famer, numerous doctors, lawyers, head teachers, teachers, Ivy league scholarships, US college scholarships, double honours students, Time magazine correspondent, Grammy nominee and 5 Team GB players at the London Olympics (out of 12). Listening to the man in front of me and knowing the success above it’s hard to imagine that he has had to fend off closure, eviction and lack of funding to be where the club is today. With each example and question March 2015 83
Photos credit: Papaya Photography
• No bouncing the ball unless it’s a drill (need to be paying attention) • You are here to play Basketball, whatever else is going on it stays outside Jimmy is unapologetic about how strict the club is. “We are strict because they aren’t going to learn otherwise”. But the interesting thing is that in balance to this he talks about the fact that every kid is treated the same and that all are given the opportunity to shine. He then tells a story (one of many) of a short kid who came to play at his club and was accepted and coached to his strengths, eventually going on
I give about the tough times Jimmy waves it off. It’s part of life, but he wants to talk about more important things. The next generation, funding for sport and support for those playing for their country, to him these are far more important to be taking about. “If you can’t show kids people to aspire to, how can they aspire?” he asks. And he is right, but it also shows where his heart is: he is always thinking about the next generation and the next and what are we doing. Jimmy has a very clear set of values and rules for those who want to play at his club: • You must pay (it as to cost them something, it’s not a hand-out) • Zero tolerance for losing your temper, instant 5 match ban
84 March 2015
to be one of the leading scorers in English history playing for his country - all because Jimmy believed in him, gave him a chance and coached to his strengths. Jimmy’s view is that everyone is good at something and they need identify what it is and what their role in the team is. Everything Jimmy talks about is about team; there are no ‘ball hogs’ or ‘individuals’, despite his desire to see each person be the best they can be. What is it all about with a team? I ask him. “It’s not about winning a game of basketball; it’s about winning the game of life. Yes to the positive and no to the negative,” Jimmy replies. “It’s about a winning attitude.” And that’s it, that’s what has made him so successful, an ability to see the best in someone and work with it, to instil discipline and give kids a reason to be and to
instil life skills beyond the court. That’s why so many
interesting thing is that Jimmy wants this to continue
have gone on to be so much more than just another
when he is gone, not for him but for basketball. As
kid from a deprived area.
he explains, when a fellow coach died so did his club,
Does he see himself as an amazing coach? No, of course not. The hallmark of any unsung hero is that they don’t shout about it and they do what they do for the love of it. As Jimmy said when I ask him, “I
Jimmy says “I don’t want that happening and so we are working on that now”. He wants the success to continue after he is no longer here, it’s bigger than him, he says.
never thought in my wildest dreams that I would get
“I still buzz like I used to. I’m very lucky to have done
the pleasure I have from coaching.” That’s great to
something all these years that I love,” Jimmy says -
hear from someone who has given so much. I ask him
and I think this is a fitting summary of a man who has
why he still does it and he leans over and says “..as
devoted his life to the inner city, to basketball and
mad as it sounds, when I get those little ones, I’m
to instilling life skills and values in countless kids and
learning something about how you teach them and
generations.
get them to respond”. What an incredibly humble view to have at seventy three, having coached for thirty five years. The
March 2015 85
“A trophy carries dust. Memories last forever.” - Mary Lou Retton
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Thank you’s So many thank you’s that I don’t think they can really
Smith thank you for your time, it was great to spend
issue we have made so many new friends and met
conversation where an amazing experience, thank
be captured in a few short words but I will try. This
some incredible people doing truly amazing things, often under the radar.
So thank you to Alexis for your time, openness and sharing, petrol fumes all the way, you are a legend!
Thanks also to Allison for all your time and support. To Richard, thank you for your time, effort and
selfless support not just of the magazine but cricket.
it with you; Jimmy Rogers your humility, lessons and you sir!
Finally to all the athletes who share their highs and
lows, and you the reader without whom it would be a pointless exercise - so a huge thanks to you for reading and sharing the magazine! Myak.
Thanks to Sylvia for her time and honesty and
the Deutscher Fusball-Bund for their support and
assistance. Cindy, you rock! Such vision and passion, it’s great to share with others what you are doing.
Kelly at Yellow Jersey, thank you for your belief and refreshing way of looking at things; the Moroccan
tourist board, Lalla Aicha Tour School and the LET
for their information and access to The Late Princess Lalla Aicha images; Harriet for your writing and
education in a new sport. Shannon, such a star, love
what you have done and are doing, thank you for all
your time, input and access; the Invicta FC team that has helped with all sorts for this issue.
Thanks to Roger at Digital Forest for his ongoing
support and amazing work; my ever faithful and long suffering proof reader, couldn’t do it without you! Huge thanks to Adidas and FIFA for their images,
information and help with so much, not just within
the magazine but for the World Cup in general. Kelly
The views and opinions expressed by the writers in this magazine are their own and not necessarily those of Sports International Magazine. © Copyright 2015 Sports International Magazine. All Rights Reserved 88 March 2015
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