Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 91 total)
  • Equal pay in Sport
  • dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    Now I am a firm believer in equal pay for anyone doing the same job and categorizing pay by gender (or any other metric) is wrong.

    On the back of the 661 article one thing I noted was ‘lesser media attention, lesser pay and prize money’ – surely this is best addressed by only having one category in a given sport and letting pure performance decide who wins and gets paid.

    Track events are dominated by black runners but a ‘100 metres for white blokes’ would be silly.

    Yet we have a separate category for women.

    Wrong forum too 🙁

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Equal pay in sports is in many cases, political correctness. That for me is disrespectful and counter productive. I work in finance and a women absolutely should be paid equally for equal work. However is sports its about performance and viewing figures / sponsorship and in the vast majority if sports its not the same.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Tennis: When the women do 5-set matches they’ve earned the same as the men.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Yet we have a separate category for women.

    One of the key things that defines ‘sport’ is the idea of fair play and ‘a level playing field’ – in athletic and endurance events – such as cycle racing – physiologically a man will always have a better power to weight ration than a woman so a competition of that nature where men and women compete head to head wouldn’t be ‘fair’

    Similarly we have categorisation of sports by age with junior and veteran categories for the same reason – to have fairer, closer competition, and is some sports you’ll have classification by size or weight.

    Fair rates of ‘pay’ are a different issue. Its not about a pay rate in the same way that a conventional job has a pay rate and scale. In an employment situation you get a wage for being good enough not for doing your best (all though those might be the same thing) and certainly no for being the best.

    Sport is about winning prizes, and the size of those prizes is dictated by the level of support that sport receives from spectators / fans / viewers, either from their ticket money of from the sponsors and advertisers that want to reach those fans. The money doesn’t come from nowhere, its directly proportional to the volume of popular support that sport receives. The more fans there are the more profit motive there is to stage an event and the more prize money you can offer to attract the competitors this fans want to see.

    So the big money is in being the best in the world in something that everyone wants to watch you do. I remember a Ted Talk where Rodney Mullen talked about his skateboarding career and being ‘the best in the world at something nobody was interested in anymore’ which why he’s not a multimillionaire even though there a very few people who are better at their sport than he was at his.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Keep it fair – just base the pay on the number of people who come to watch. Simples…..

    Full equality

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Tennis: When the women do 5-set matches they’ve earned the same as the men.

    I suppose thats the point in a way – in tennis men and women don’t compete against each other, but they compete in the same courts, in the same tournament in front of the same audience who’ve all paid for the same tickets. The mens matches might be longer than the womens, but competitors don’t have to fill out a time sheet (although Isner and Mahut probably wish you did – double bubble )

    jamj1974
    Full Member

    The value of prizes in professional sport are a surely a drop in the ocean compared to revenue. So why the use of revenue as a means to evaluate the ‘fairness’ of earnings…?

    In terms of sponsorship,it would be interesting to compare a high-profile female female athletes earnings compared to a middle-ranking male in the same sport.

    As for the ‘when women play five sets’ argument, when women have the choice of playing five sets that may be valid. I’m not sure they are offered the choice.

    All a bit pointless though really, because even where women are shown to add equal financial value to the bottom line – they are still paid less on average. E.g. Female board members, CEO’s etc…

    scaredypants
    Full Member

    I’d like to see a tour de france for unfit middle aged blokes

    (using me as the living definition of the upper limit for admissible physiology)

    dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    All a bit pointless though really, because even where women are shown to add equal financial value to the bottom line – they are still paid less on average. E.g. Female board members, CEO’s etc…

    And they shouldn’t be. I’m all for equal pay for everyone doing the same job but what seems to be being asked in sport is for is equal pay for people doing a lesser job in terms of actual performance/ viewing figures/revenue generated.

    edhornby
    Full Member

    b0ll0cks

    it’s a self fulfilling prophesy – promote womens sport less, deprioritise them on the TV schedule then say ‘oh no one watches it so it doesn’t generate the same revenue, therefore you get less money’

    pay them the same

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Footballers? Do you think the leading womens footballers should be paid as much as the leading men?

    Who by?

    dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    it’s a self fulfilling prophesy – promote womens sport less, deprioritise them on the TV schedule then say ‘oh no one watches it so it doesn’t generate the same revenue, therefore you get less money’

    So these massive multinational sports and media organisations lose out on billions of pounds worth of income and profits just to spite women?

    jamj1974
    Full Member

    So these massive multinational sports and media organisations lose out on billions of pounds worth of income and profits just to spite women?

    No. It’s probably more to do with the fact they can’t be arsed to support an emerging market for women’s sport when they can continue to milk the male sport bandwagons they jumped on 70 odd years ago.

    dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    I’m just not convinced that the greedy buggers would pass up a money making opportunity.

    I’d go as far as to say that Sky would sponsor and televise competitive daffodil growing if they thought it would turn a profit.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Its a bit of both

    Men are physically stronger so when they do sport it will tend to be beter [ faster stronger not necessarily aesthetically] better so they will always attract the most fans – and i assume most sports fans are men – and therefore get the most money

    That said we also do have an issue with the promotion of female sports stars and the pay they get

    Even the very successful female track athletes wont be getting what their male counterparts do and this disparity does need addressing.

    km79
    Free Member

    It’s similar to what goes on in Hollywood with actors salaries. The woman are paid way less than the men, even when they have comparable box office appeal. Question is, why do they accept it?

    irc
    Full Member

    The woman are paid way less than the men, even when they have comparable box office appeal.

    Women’s football top flight crowds? Last season the average crowd in the English Woman’s Super League was 892. Their pay should reflect the size of crowds their game attracts.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/33501771

    aracer
    Free Member

    I wonder how large a proportion of the total time they spend playing tennis as part of their “job” they spend playing matches, I wonder how much total time the women spend playing tennis compared to the men.

    Though if you want to base pay on the amount of time they spend performing, presumably female downhill mountain bikers should be paid more than the men? Paula Radcliffe should be paid about 800 times what Usain Bolt is?

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Dunno. I don’t watch them practising. Do the TV companies show it?

    dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    It’s similar to what goes on in Hollywood with actors salaries. The woman are paid way less than the men, even when they have comparable box office appeal. Question is, why do they accept it?

    Depends on what they think you will bring and what they can get away with, not always by gender.

    John Travolta got only (ONLY!!!!) $150,000 for Pulp Fiction – much less than all the others including Uma Thurman.

    Sean Astin (Sam Gamgee in LOTR) got only £250,000 for the 3 films; much less than Cate Blanchett.

    Chris Evans (Captain America) got $300,000 for his first appearance and 3 million for Avengers. Scarlet Johanson got £6 million.

    aracer
    Free Member

    You know when you see a TV newsreader perform for 30 minutes, that doesn’t mean they get to snort coke for the other 23.5 hours a day.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    There’s a simple answer to this, keep woman specific sports, but allow any woman that fancies their chances to enter the mens event. If they’re good enough they’ll earn.

    You can’t go supplementing womans sport on the basis of equality, that’s mental.

    dangerousbeans
    Free Member

    You know when you see a TV newsreader perform for 30 minutes, that doesn’t mean they get to snort coke for the other 23.5 hours a day.

    Not what I heard about Bill Turnbull.

    mefty
    Free Member

    I wonder how large a proportion of the total time they spend playing tennis as part of their “job” they spend playing matches, I wonder how much total time the women spend playing tennis compared to the men.

    But the thing with tennis is that the women are still able to play doubles in the big tournaments whereas the men simply can’t, if they are going to be competitive, enabling them to earn additional prize money.

    mefty
    Free Member

    The simple fact is sport is “eat what you kill” if people are paying to watch then you get a decent slice – people will only invest in promotion if they can see a pay back.

    pleaderwilliams
    Free Member

    Its nowhere near as simple as numbers of people who come and watch, it’s pretty obvious that promotion has a lot to do with. The sports that run men’s and women’s competitions concurrently, in the same venues and on the same broadcasts, like Tennis, and a few of the Olympic sports: Athletics, Swimming, Track cycling etc. all unsurprisingly generate a lot more interest in women’s sports than those that are totally separate like football. That means that the female stars of those sports are household names, and people take an interest in their results. Consequently I suspect the prize money and pay is probably more equitable in those sports.

    I bet if you had women’s premier league matches played right before or after the men’s fixtures, or a women’s Tour de France run over similar stages, and all broadcast on the same channels you would see a very rapid growth in their followings. They might never reach the same level, but it would be a lot more even than it is now. As it is the women haven’t had the chance to prove that people would want to watch them.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Drop a quick line to HoSport at he Beeb then, theyre a bit desperate for action these days. They could be the channel that satisfies the pent up craving for women’s sport. Winners all round….

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    I bet if you had women’s premier league matches played right before or after the men’s fixtures, or a women’s Tour de France run over similar stages

    Not really, look at viewing figures for the likes of Scottish fitba played right after or before EPL games. There’s a massive drop in viewing figures. For EPL big games you are looking at viewing figures of 1.3m-ish. The Scottish game before or after, say Celtic v Aberdeen will be lucky to hit 150k viewers, and will quite often struggle to beat 100k. Celtic v Rangers games only ever top out at around 800k.

    It’s a reality in sport that viewing figures get you the money, women’s fitba being associated with the men’s wouldn’t make a great deal of difference. It’d see a possibly see a very slight increase in interest, but certainly not enough to keep the TV companies interested in bidding for it regularly.

    Heck if you’re supplementing womens fitba, then I want scottish fitba supplemented. And by extention, I want supplemented, personally. Why should one aspect of society get a supplement and others not, after all we’re all about equality are we not? If we’re championing socialism for one aspect of society, then lets go the whole hog.

    Plus, womens fitba is gumpff, that’s just the reality. The product will need to vastly improve before the TV networks take an interest.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    Also it’s another reality in sport that if you want to earn you’ll need to travel to earn, with the likes of womens fitba, well head off to america, they had decent viewing figures for the womens world cup just past, so there’s obviously going to be a market developing there. I think you’ll struggling in europe if big bucks is the aim.

    satchm00
    Free Member

    surely this is best addressed by only having one category in a given sport and letting pure performance decide who wins and gets paid.

    Like Formula 1? Look how that works out…

    It wouldn’t be very appealing to some females if it was mixed only. I think there is a place for gender specific sports if it encourages others to take part. I’m not advocating females and males shouldn’t be allowed to race either I’m just saying there is a place for different categories.

    They might never reach the same level, but it would be a lot more even than it is now

    Have you ever watched it at club level? Viewing figures would be very low after the novelty wears off (don’t think it would be cost effective) but I’m not against it being shown I just don’t think it would get the exposure you reckon. Would be nice to see a match of day version though.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    fitba

    ????

    Equality is important and should be made to work.

    it’s a self fulfilling prophesy – promote womens sport less, deprioritise them on the TV schedule then say ‘oh no one watches it so it doesn’t generate the same revenue, therefore you get less money’

    This is the thing in the end, if we continue to do the same things we have always done do you think it will change?

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    mikewsmith – Member
    fitba
    ????
    Equality is important and should be made to work.

    There is no equality in sport, pretty much goes against the entire concept of it. Men don’t get paid the same either.

    football/fitba

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    Men don’t get the same as?
    Sport doesn’t want to tackle the hard issue, one of the biggest problems is to fix pay equality is it will cost more, it will be a huge investment but as nobody is really bothering to try we won’t get to see the rewards.

    irc
    Full Member

    one of the biggest problems is to fix pay equality

    They had pay equality in the 1960s when there was a max wage for footballers. Jimmy Hill fixed that though.

    Equal pay in sport? Easy to say. Who is paying the money though? I’m sure the British tiddly winks team would like equal pay with male footballers as well. They don’t have the audience figures or advertising pulling power either.

    Even when strength and endurance are not factors I don’t see campaigns to have equal competitions rather than separate male/female events. Curling or Olympic shooting events for example. Why not make those open events. Actually the shooting events were open events from 1968-1980. Were they changed because only two women were ever good enough to win medals?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_at_the_Summer_Olympics

    Sport at top level is not about equality it’s about measuring inequality.

    glasgowdan
    Free Member

    You can’t go supplementing womans sport on the basis of equality, that’s mental.

    So true. There’s a huge movement going on with this one flaw, forcing equality is completely unequal.

    piemonster
    Full Member

    Sport, is primarily a business not a sport in this context.

    Pay per unique view is a consequence of that. If you want equality you need women’s football/cycling etc to receive the same viewing levels. It’s not a case of effort on the individuals part, it’s about the individuals ability to generate revenue for the business. Whether women are getting paid equally per view is something I’d be interested to see more on. Tennis was mentioned earlier, would have thought viewing figures would have been pretty similar?

    In an ideal world we’d all be paid for effort. But we’re not.

    vickypea
    Free Member

    If male footballers weren’t paid such idiotic, ridiculously high salaries, there might be enough left over to increase the salaries of women footballers.

    timba
    Free Member

    2015 mens’ FA Cup final, attendance 89,283
    2015 womens’ FA Cup final, attendance 30,710
    2014 mens’ friendly v Norway had lower gate figures than the 2014 womens’ friendly v Germany
    I don’t know the TV viewing figures, but on the Wembley gate figures alone you might expect the top women players to be paid a generous salary. But they aren’t, not even close

    ctk
    Free Member

    I don’t know why more women tennis players are not up in arms about not playing 5 sets. To me this is deeply patronising.

    enfht
    Free Member

    Female athletes should be permitted to take performance enhancing drugs so they can run as fast as men, and men should be made to throw underarm. We’re lucky there’s no shopping trolley events because we all saw how badly men performed on supermarket sweep..

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