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Netball pursues Olympic Games debut in 2032

Netball pursues Olympic Games debut in 2032
Grace Nweke of New Zealand during the Constellation Cup netball series - game one between the New Zealand Silver Ferns and the Australian Diamonds at Spark Arena in Auckland, New Zealand on Wednesday October 12, 2022. Copyright photo: Aaron Gillions / www.photosport.nz

Grace Nweke of New Zealand during the Constellation Cup netball series – game one between the New Zealand Silver Ferns and the Australian Diamonds at Spark Arena in Auckland, New Zealand on Wednesday October 12, 2022. Copyright photo: Aaron Gillions / www.photosport.nz
Photo: Aaron Gillions / www.photosport.nz

In July 2021, Brisbane secured the rights to host the 2032 Olympic Games, winning a landslide vote amongst International Olympic Committee (IOC) delegates, 72 to five.

The news was well received by Australians who love their sport and particularly well by netball fans, who thought this may just be the sport’s best chance to finally debut on the Olympic program.

Roughly three weeks later, World Netball and Netball Australia launched a joint campaign in the hope of pushing their case for Brisbane 2032.

And although it feels like time is on their side, with almost a decade to go before the event starts, there are also plenty of factors working against them.

It took 20 years of lobbying and three failed attempts in 1967, 1983 and 1987 before netball was recognised by the IOC as an official sport in 1995.

And while this endorsement was a step forward, netball has since been knocked back at least four times in its quest to be included on the Olympic program – in 1996, 2008, 2011 and 2020.

There has reportedly been frustration over the years for World Netball, which feels as if the IOC has given them new hoops to jump through each time they have addressed a previous request; but as it stands, the main issues preventing netball’s inclusion lie in its appeal beyond the Commonwealth of Nations and the outside perception that it is mostly just a female sport.

Both of these potential obstructions will be explored in a two-part feature by the ABC, the second of which focuses on netball’s push for gender equality and the timeline of its consideration for Brisbane 2032.

The IOC new sport process and agenda

When it comes to the actual process, netball has two ways in which it can potentially join the 2032 Brisbane Olympic program.

Australia’s women’s sevens team celebrate their gold medal win at the Rio Olympics

The last sports that were successful in their bids to get a two-thirds majority vote amongst IOC delegates, were golf and rugby7s in 2016.(AP Photo: Themba Hadebe)

The first is through an application from World Netball that would need to be submitted by the IOC’s session in 2025, seven years before the Brisbane Games. Here, netball would need a two thirds majority vote amongst IOC delegates for its application to be successful.

The second would require the Brisbane 2032 organising committee to make an application for netball to be included as one of its local sports, no later than three years out from the event.

This is perhaps where netball has the greatest chance of getting over the line, but it is still likely to find itself in competition with other popular Australian sports like cricket, squash and rugby league.

This second process also doesn’t tend to lead to a permanent presence at the Games, with sports such as softball/baseball falling away for Paris 2024 despite being approved for Tokyo 2020.

No matter which way netball tries to go, the factors that will be taken into consideration by the IOC will be based on the Olympic Agenda launched in 2020 – which listed new quotas that cap the Games at 10,500 athletes and strive for an overall 50 per cent female participation rate.

Netball is a team sport, with seven athletes on court for each side and an extra five starting on the bench (based on Commonwealth Games match standards), so organisers will have to consider whether this puts too much pressure on the athlete cap.

However, other sports like rugby have managed this hurdle in the past by holding qualifying tournaments that lower their number of countries and athletes competing at the actual Games and also entering their sevens format rather than their traditional 15-player format.

In terms of the gender split, netball skews heavily female and this could either hinder or help its chances, depending on what happens with the other sports involved at Brisbane 2032.

In Tokyo, the gender split was 48.8 per cent female, while the Australian team was 52 per cent female, so things are already heading in the right direction.

Netball Australia has been working hard over the past 12 months to promote its men’s game, with various men’s Tests staged as double headers alongside the women’s matches at both the trans-Tasman Constellation Cup and England Roses series held in October and November.

Various Super Netball clubs also signed official men’s training partners for 2023 and are doing more to promote their profiles. Male players have often helped elite female teams prepare in their pre-season and weekly training sessions, but it has been in a silent capacity behind the scenes.

So, will it be enough for netball to demonstrate an increased commitment to the men’s side of the game, or would it be required to enter a separate men’s and women’s division?

If the latter was the case, would there even be enough international competition to stage a men’s netball event? And how would that further impact the athlete cap?

These are all questions yet to be mulled over by the IOC and Brisbane 2032 organising committee.

Liz Nicholl is the president of World Netball. The governing body has 79 members – 57 full, 22 associate – split into five regional federations: Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania.(Getty: Nathan Stirk)

World Netball believes some of its strengths lie in its high participation base, the quality of its major events like the Netball World Cup, its strong governance structure, exemplary anti-doping record, and its culture and ethical values.

It holds a strong position in five continents, particuarly Africa, is the number one team sport for females across Oceania, and has been inspiring and supporting women and girls for over 125 years.

As part of its strategy ‘To Grow, To Play and To Inspire’ some of the goals it has identified include: working with the Commonwealth Games Foundation to introduce Fast5 netball to the Commonwealth Youth Games, building a charitable World Netball Foundation, creating structures to ensure its athletes have a voice in the decision-making of the sport, and growing its presence at continental games such as the Central American and Caribbean Games, the African Games and the Asian Indoor Games.

“The formal process for additional sports for Brisbane 2032 has not yet started,” World Netball said in a statement provided to the ABC.

“The focus is [currently] on additional sports for Los Angeles 2028, so this stage its very much about understanding the objectives of the Games and how they align with World Netball’s strategies.

“In the meantime, World Netball has consulted with its members and regions to ensure we have their support and have considered the steps that need to take place to create a compelling case.”

– ABC

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