Dark days ahead
The images could hardly have been further removed.
In Rio the Olympic carnival is seemingly already under way after International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacques Rogge awarded the 2016 Games to the Brazilian city on Friday.
The jubilant South American street-party scenes were beamed around the globe as a nation celebrated, even though there’s a lengthy seven-year struggle ahead.
Meanwhile here in Africa a day later and the “party” was turning ugly.
Led by former Olympic and Commonwealth sprinter, Geraldine Pillay, a cross-section of the nation’s athletics stars from both genders and all races, were meeting to try and address some of the myriad problems the sport finds itself in.
This after Athletics South Africa president Leonard Chuene admitted lying in the Caster Semenya gender controversy and major sponsor Nedbank terminated its lucrative contract early.
According to media reports though the meeting was ‘hijacked’ by uninvited ‘athletes’ , led by still joint national 400-metre record-holder Hendrik Mokganyetsi. Before the meeting it was said that no ASA board members would be welcome but Mokganyetsi was allowed in because he was a former athlete. As the meeting turned into a shambles he left.
It’s only understandable that South African sport in general has had up and downs since the re-admission to the global sporting fold in the early 90s.
Rugby has had ongoing troubles (think former coach Andre Markgraaff’s alleged racial slurs, the Geo Cronje furore over refusing to share a room with a team-mate of colour, the infamous Kamp Staaldraad). Cricket has had the scandalous Hansie Cronje matchfixing furore). The national soccer side find themselves languishing in mediocrity on the world rankings and the recent SAFA elections were also a charade.
But it’s hard to remember a time when SA athletics was in such disarray.
Coverage of this mockery of a meeting in Pretoria on Saturday made the front page lead story in national Sunday paper Rapport and disgraceful scenes of finger-pointing and shouting that went on as the meeting degenerated into mayhem were screened around the country by e.tv.
In the digital era, the world is a small place and there can be no doubt that the international sports leaders are watching with more than a little concern.
This sort of thing does our athletics in particular and sport in general no favours at all. If the athletes have their grievances they deserve a platform for themselves to be heard in a respectful manner. If they honestly thought everything was rosy then why would they have called the meeting. The general impression is that athletics is dying in South Africa. The athletes want to save it.
And it doesn’t make things any easier that Mokganyetsi is a member of the SASCOC Athletes’ Commission, a forum for athletes to allow themselves to be heard and a go-between for athletes, federations and SASCOC.
Saturday’s events do not exactly inspire confidence that current athletes are having any say in the running of their sport. Nor does it inspire prospective athletics stars to aspire to greatness.
Swimmer Roland Schoeman was once offered millions to represent Qatar on the world stage. He turned it down but one wonders if SA sport continues on its current course, athletes from other codes will be forced down that drastic road.






