Sarina Wiegman stood by Lauren James but how many elite athletes experience that depth of support in moments of crisis?
If you want to see a high-performance team with compassion at its heart, there are regular 90-minute(-plus) masterclasses from the Lionesses free on UK screens at the moment. We’ve seen a few individual athletes start to role-model self-compassion publicly over recent times, ranging from Simone Biles to Ben Stokes. Now we are seeing the power of compassion in team performance.
Compassion has not been a traditional hallmark of sport. With its UK roots in 19th-century British public schools and universities, modern sport developed as way of creating strong military leaders, training them in the resilience defined in those times by grit and a stiff upper lip. Fear and harsh criticism were essential to toughening up players and soldiers alike. The “tough guy” narrative was dramatised and reinforced by 20th-century media stereotypes and Hollywood’s heroes and became engrained into sport and society.
More Stories
Mixed 4x400m silver caps successful world relay championships for Australia
Nicolas Jackson’s petulance leaves Chelsea’s top-five bid in jeopardy | Jonathan Wilson
Aldershot end 99-year Wembley wait with sunshine and champagne showers