Parasports in the context of the media and partnerships

Some years ago, I used to feel dis­ap­poin­ted if my sport­ing achie­ve­ments or tho­se of other para-ath­le­tes did not recei­ve enough reco­gni­ti­on in the media. Whe­re­as in the past, I usual­ly tried to find the fault in mys­elf, today I under­stand the mecha­nisms behind this phe­no­me­non, at least in part. Cle­ar­ly, we are a frin­ge sport that not so many peo­p­le are inte­res­ted in and which the­r­e­fo­re gets less covera­ge in the media. Parasports are not sui­ta­ble for the mas­ses for various under­stan­da­ble reasons. One reason for the lack of inte­rest, I belie­ve, is that sport is stron­gly asso­cia­ted with aes­the­tics and a cer­tain enter­tain­ment value. Whe­re­as sport is syn­ony­mous with well-being, “natu­ral­ness”, health and per­for­mance, disa­bi­li­ty tends to be asso­cia­ted with “ill-being”, “unna­tu­ral­ness” and poor per­for­mance. In addi­ti­on, it reminds some peo­p­le of their own vul­nerabi­li­ty. The­re is a gulf bet­ween the con­cepts of disa­bi­li­ty and enter­tain­ment and to this day, parasports embo­dy the oppo­si­te of aes­the­tics, per­for­mance and spec­ta­cle for many people.

That said, I some­ti­mes noti­ce a dis­pa­ri­ty in the way cer­tain sports, ath­le­tes, events, suc­ces­ses and fail­ures are given dif­fe­rent levels of atten­ti­on, eva­lua­ted dif­fer­ent­ly or even igno­red in some parts of the media. Report­ing on parasports is doubt­less­ly a dif­fi­cult task. The num­e­rous, some­ti­mes hard-to-under­stand cate­go­ries that the ath­le­tes are assi­gned to based on their phy­si­cal impairm­ents are dif­fi­cult to com­mu­ni­ca­te and make it easy for audi­en­ces to lose sight of the big­ger pic­tu­re. And even for expe­ri­en­ced jour­na­lists, the per­for­man­ces are often chal­len­ging to assess and clas­si­fy. Final­ly, it is never pos­si­ble to meet everyone’s dif­fe­ring needs; some peo­p­le will always feel hard done by. Expres­sing only cri­ti­cism would be the wrong thing to do. In recent years, sports report­ing has chan­ged a lot, with covera­ge of parasports on the rise. No doubt digi­ta­li­sa­ti­on is a major fac­tor, but the rele­van­ce of parasports per se and the desi­re to report on them have also grown. Covera­ge of the Para­lym­pics in par­ti­cu­lar has increased ste­adi­ly in recent years, and in some cases they are even broad­cast live with com­men­ta­ry. Per­for­mance levels have risen in many sports in recent years, and they have beco­me more attrac­ti­ve as a result. Wheel­chair ath­le­tics is par­ti­cu­lar­ly popu­lar thanks to its high­ly dyna­mic, powerful and aes­the­tic qua­li­ties, and the action-packed, tac­ti­cal ele­ments pro­vi­de for a gre­at deal of suspense.

The lan­guage of report­ing has also chan­ged. In the past, the focus was more on the disa­bi­li­ty and how the ath­le­tes coped with their ever­y­day lives. In some cases, the empha­sis was shifted onto medi­cal aspects in a high­ly dra­ma­tic fashion. The aim was to tell a “heroic” sto­ry – one that often trig­ge­red an uns­po­ken respon­se of “Oh, isn’t that delightful/sweet?” in audi­en­ces. Today, for­t­u­na­te­ly, the atten­ti­on is more on sport­ing achievements.

One point that I have some­ti­mes cri­ti­cis­ed a litt­le in the past is the fact that in parasports, some issues and results do not recei­ve as much scru­ti­ny and are not view­ed with as much dif­fe­ren­tia­ti­on as they are in other sports. It is the­r­e­fo­re very posi­ti­ve, in my opi­ni­on, that after the deve­lo­p­ment of our new and extre­me­ly suc­cessful high-tech racing wheel­chair, ques­ti­ons were rai­sed about the issue of fair­ness. Ano­ther exam­p­le is the jus­ti­fied ques­ti­on of whe­ther pro­sthe­tic leg blades do not offer their users a com­pe­ti­ti­ve advan­ta­ge over non-dis­ab­led sprin­ters and long jum­pers. Such dis­pu­tes may not always be plea­sant, but they are neces­sa­ry. Cri­ti­cal but fair report­ing shows that you are being taken serious­ly. I some­ti­mes get the impres­si­on, howe­ver, that the­re is a cer­tain reluc­tance to cri­ti­cise peo­p­le with disa­bi­li­ties or ask ques­ti­ons about their beha­viour and decis­i­on-making. In-depth back­ground know­ledge and well-foun­ded, mul­ti-face­ted report­ing are often lack­ing, too. That said, I have noti­ced recent­ly that an incre­asing num­ber of jour­na­lists are put­ting a lot of effort into obtai­ning this back­ground infor­ma­ti­on and going into more depth. As para-ath­le­tes and mem­bers of sport­ing orga­ni­sa­ti­ons, we too have a respon­si­bi­li­ty to make rele­vant and important infor­ma­ti­on available to the media. By doing so, we can pre­vent fal­se or incom­ple­te infor­ma­ti­on from being dis­se­mi­na­ted and help to increase the wil­ling­ness to report on parasports. In future, we should stri­ve to get more covera­ge not just in Para­lym­pic years but also in the years in bet­ween. To achie­ve this, we all have to pull tog­e­ther. Our sport can and must beco­me more attrac­ti­ve and under­stan­da­ble, for both view­ers and the media. This will enable us to use the exis­ting poten­ti­al to pre­sent and mar­ket our­sel­ves more effec­tively. Final­ly, grea­ter awa­re­ness in the media and thus in the broa­der public can also have an effect on poten­ti­al spon­sors and partnerships.

News­pa­per report on the Oita Mara­thon in Japan

 

Part­ner­ships

I was lucky enough to be sup­port­ed by both insti­tu­ti­ons and spon­sors from an ear­ly stage of my sport­ing care­er. Some long­stan­ding part­ner­ships have evol­ved as a result. I am very gra­teful to my loy­al main spon­sors Alli­anz Suis­se, Hug­bau, Ort­ho­tec and Jagu­ar Land Rover Switz­er­land, as well as other spon­sors and part­ners, for the cru­cial sup­port they have given me during my sport­ing care­er. My thanks also go to our asso­cia­ti­on Wheel­chair Sport Switz­er­land, Swiss Para­lym­pic and the Swiss Para­ple­gic Group.

I am sure that past and cur­rent spon­sors have had dif­fe­rent reasons for sup­port­ing me. Some may have been inte­res­ted main­ly in the social aspects, spon­so­ring me pri­ma­ri­ly as an act of good­will, whe­re­as others saw an oppor­tu­ni­ty in terms of mar­ke­ting and image enhance­ment. In the ear­ly part of my care­er in par­ti­cu­lar, most of the sup­port was pro­ba­b­ly pro­vi­ded for bene­vo­lent reasons. In tho­se days, only a very small num­ber of para-ath­le­tes had risen to fame and were able to attract spon­sors through their popu­la­ri­ty. This situa­ti­on has now chan­ged con­sider­a­b­ly, with suc­cessful para-ath­le­tes beco­ming strong ambassa­dors and adver­ti­sing figureheads.

I have expe­ri­en­ced an encou­ra­ging trend in this regard in rela­ti­on to both me and others, espe­ci­al­ly in recent years – for exam­p­le with cam­paigns that focus not on the disa­bi­li­ty but on the sport. This is par­ti­cu­lar­ly pre­va­lent in cam­paigns or acti­vi­ties in which para-ath­le­tes and non-dis­ab­led ath­le­tes work along­side one ano­ther and cam­paign for a cau­se or product.

A fur­ther per­so­nal high­light in this con­text was the deve­lo­p­ment of a new racing wheel­chair with various Swiss part­ners. Ort­ho­tec AG secu­red the invol­vement of Sau­ber and Swiss Side, both of which alre­a­dy have well-estab­lished ope­ra­ti­ons in sport, and deve­lo­ped what is curr­ent­ly one of the best racing wheel­chairs in the world. I am deligh­ted that I have sin­ce been able to cele­bra­te many suc­ces­ses with this high-tech pie­ce of equip­ment. What is equal­ly important to me, howe­ver, is the pro­fes­sio­nal natu­re of our col­la­bo­ra­ti­on. It has been a rela­tively unu­su­al expe­ri­ence for me as a solo ath­le­te to expe­ri­ence how a team of high­ly moti­va­ted and qua­li­fied experts work­ed tog­e­ther towards a shared goal.

In the mean­ti­me, I have been able to enter into other exci­ting part­ner­ships and hel­ped to dri­ve for­ward some inno­va­ti­ve deve­lo­p­ments. Such col­la­bo­ra­ti­ons are very enri­ching for me and will hop­eful­ly bene­fit other para-ath­le­tes too in the future.

I can cer­tain­ly count mys­elf as one of the most pri­vi­le­ged para-ath­le­tes in terms of media pre­sence and sup­port. I hope that in the future, more young para-ath­le­tes will be able to work their way into a simi­lar­ly suc­cessful position.

More and more media orga­ni­sa­ti­ons and com­pa­nies are reco­g­nis­ing their respon­si­bi­li­ty and actively doing their bit to sus­tain­ab­ly pro­mo­te diver­si­ty and inclu­si­on in sport. Para-ath­le­tes deser­ve reco­gni­ti­on and respect for their achie­ve­ments, irre­spec­ti­ve of their disa­bi­li­ty. The gro­wing public pre­sence and app­re­cia­ti­on of para-ath­le­tes, be it in the media or through adver­ti­sing part­ner­ships, helps to shape how peo­p­le with disa­bi­li­ties are per­cei­ved and accept­ed in general.

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