This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia, which closed in 2021.

Stop Attributing The Success Of Women Olympians To Men

Stop Attributing The Success Of Women Olympians To Men
Katinka Hosszu shattered that world record all by herself, thank you very much.
Getty/Twitter
Katinka Hosszu shattered that world record all by herself, thank you very much.
Katinka Hosszu shattered that world record all by herself, thank you very much.
Getty/Twitter
Katinka Hosszu shattered that world record all by herself, thank you very much.

It’s 2016 and apparently this still needs to be said: When women Olympians win medals, they deserve the credit. The Rio Olympic Games began on Friday night, and in the subsequent 48 hours, people (specifically certain members of the media) couldn’t resist attributing the successes of female athletes to their husbands and/or male coaches, and their ability to emulate men writ large.

When three-time Olympian trapshooter Corey Cogdell won her second bronze medal, the Chicago Tribune couldn’t even be bothered to use her name, instead focusing on the fact that she’s married to Chicago Bears lineman Mitch Unrein:

When Hungarian swimmer Katinka Hosszu won a gold medal and broke the world record in the 400-meter individual medley, NBC panned over to her husband/coach in the stands and called him “the man responsible.”

And when American swimmer Katie Ledecky crushed HER OWN world record in the 400-meter freestyle, beating out her closest competitor by almost 5 seconds, NBC’s commentator had to clarify that no, she does not “swim like a man.”

“She swims like Katie Ledecky for crying out loud,” Rowdy Gaines emphatically said after the 19-year-old swimmer finished her record-breaking race.

This is the kind of commentary NBC's Rowdy Gaines pushed back on Sunday night.
This is the kind of commentary NBC's Rowdy Gaines pushed back on Sunday night.

Because athletics and physical prowess in general have historically been coded male, women athletes are often spoken about as anomalies ― if they are spoken about at all. (After all, the Olympics is one of the few times women athletes actually get significant media attention.)

To frame women Olympians’ skills and achievements in relation to men is a way of making those achievements more socially acceptable. Their physical achievements push the boundaries of what we are comfortable seeing women’s bodies do. To watch a female Olympian compete is to see the unbelievable power a woman’s body can possess. They are smashing and vaulting and propelling and flying and shooting. So we give credit to the men in their lives and respective sports.

Gymnastics prodigy Simone Biles becomes “the Kobe Bryant of gymnastics,” Katie Ledecky must be manly, and Katinka Hosszu’s husband is the real reason she is smashing records.

It is heartening to see women at the Olympics getting airtime, and being celebrated for their seemingly superhuman abilities. But let’s allow those achievements to be their own. When these women win medals and break records, they are the ones who deserve the credit.

Close
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia. Certain site features have been disabled. If you have questions or concerns, please check our FAQ or contact support@huffpost.com.