By Kate Butler
At the recent tryouts for the 2006 British Columbia Surfing Association Junior Team, six young men were chosen to represent B.C. and Canada at the World Junior Championships in Brazil in early May.
These teens will have the chance to compete against the best in the world and will also get to train with some of the best instructors in Western Canada before they head for the competition. Unfortunately, B.C. will not be sending any girls to the championship.
The reason?
No teenage girls tried out for the team.
The lack of young women competing in surfing competitions is troubling. Many Canadians are aware of the international reputation that Canada has regarding women in sports. Canadian women shine in world sporting competitions, especially in events that were traditionally male-dominated. Canadian female figure skaters rarely achieve lasting success, but our womenaEUR(tm)s hockey team is undeniably the best. Our womenaEUR(tm)s gymnastics team is nothing to be feared, but our womenaEUR(tm)s speed-skating team makes victory look easy.
The recent Winter Olympics in Torino showcased the strength of Canadian female athletes. Of the 24 medals won by the Canadian team, 16 were won by female athletes. Cindy Klassen broke records, received international recognition and earned the admiration of many after winning an impressive five medals in long-track speed-skating. In Torino, Canadian female athletes showed the world Canadian sporting associations are doing the right thing by supporting male and female athletes in an equitable way.
Thanks to female athletes from Canada, the U.S., Australia and European countries, more girls are choosing to participate in sports worldwide. Despite those international successes, female competitive surfing has taken a back seat on CanadaaEUR(tm)s West Coast.
Those involved in surfing in Tofino, Ucluelet, and other towns on the Island realize too few girls are competing, but nobody knows how to remedy the problem.
A supportive surfing community exists for young women interested in surfing: from surf lessons focused on making women comfortable, to official surfing websites calling for more female competitors, to the presence of former women champions living in Tofino.
The ingredients for success for women surfers on the West Coast are definitely present. By not having any Junior Girls competing in Brazil, Canada takes a giant step backwards. On an international level, we have been leaders in the struggle to achieve equality between male and female athletes.
When a country such as Canada cannot field a team of Junior Girls, countries that do not have good track records when it comes to women in sport will take notice. Canada has missed an opportunity to further showcase the strength of women in sports. It is too late now to send a strong team of B.C. female surfers to Brazil: both Canada and the world lost this round.