The first swimmer to speak publicly about abuse in the sport praises those intent on changing the culture.
The first swimmer to speak publicly about abusive practices in the sport said she was proud of the "brave" athletes who had shared their stories to change a culture of fear.Phoebe, a Commonwealth youth gold medallist, said speaking to the BBC in February 2023 about her ordeal had been "daunting and scary".
Phoebe, of Newcastle, was contacted by more than 100 swimmers following the article who shared their own stories, as well as parents and coaches. Swim England later apologised to those who had endured bad experiences and commissioned the independent review. Its damning conclusions found a "performance first" attitude prevalent throughout the sport was put above all else, regardless of whether swimmers were suffering physically or mentally.Phoebe told how a coach pointed at parts of her body and said she'd put on weight More than 1,000 swimmers, parents, coaches and volunteers took part in the research, with another 3,500 completing a survey. "I'm so proud of how brave everyone is who also shared their stories and talked about how they feel," said Phoebe. "And overwhelmed, but also grateful for all the private messages I've had from people sharing their experiences and thanking me for talking about it." After Phoebe and others spoke out about suffering eating disorders and disordered eating, Swim England banned the weighing of children. The review found bullying was rife, by coaches and other swimmers, and said people were fearful of speaking out about bad practice for fear of being ostracised from the sport.Rebecca Adlington said she had a positive swimming experience but frequently saw others who did not Swim England's chairperson Richard Hookway said the organisation was "committed to change" and would "act on the findings, which we fully accept". Phoebe said she thought it was "amazing" to see change had already taken place and that the whole industry would learn from the review's findings. "I just want it so that when people get recognised for having a talent, they are not negatively scrutinised and or made to constantly doubt themselves or feel like they are doing something wrong," she said. "I want people to enjoy their whole swimming career, no matter where it takes them - and not be left with any of the negative scars from it like I was, and also like quite a lot of my team mates were." She added: "I started swimming in an amazing environment and I absolutely loved the competitiveness of it, I loved my friends and I loved the coaches - so I want people to have that kind of feeling about swimming for their whole career."February 2022 - Swimmers who trained with elite club Ellesmere Titans in Shropshire make a string of bullying and abuse allegations -with her story of suffering bulimia for five years while swimming competitively - it includes an anecdote where swimmers were tested with a chocolate cake and punished for eating it February 2023 - More than 100 swimmers, parents and coaches contact Phoebe to share their own experiences March 2023 - Olympic medallist Cassie Patten tells her story of feeling broken by negative comments by coaches and suffering disordered eating -, which criticises chief executive Jane Nickerson's handling of the closure of Ellesmere Titans and says other complaints were mismanagedJuly 2023 - More swimmers come forward to allege mistreatment, this time while at Loughborough University - Emily Crane, Emily Barclay and Carmella Kitching share stories of favouritism, bullying and the so-called Fat Bitch Club, for female swimmers deemed too heavy March 2024 - Chief executive Jane Nickerson retires and Andy Salmon, former CEO of British Triathlon takes overIf you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this article, help and support is available via
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