As sporting scandals continue to break with monotonous regularity, there’s a big question that needs to be asked.
Are our sportsmen still role models?
After all the performance-enhancing drugs, the sexual assault charges, the domestic violence allegations? After the booze, the group sex, the gambling addictions, the cheating-with-your-team-mate’s-wife, the crack habits, the match-fixing, the bubbling? After the sexting, the Stilnox, the racial slurs, the sex-tapes, the elephant-shooting and the nightclub brawls?
Well, are they?
Every time a sportsman does something, well, gross, we’re cautioned against considering them role models. Or examples. Or heroes.
Every time a fresh scandal breaks – with tedious regularity – commentators say, ‘Don’t put that pressure on our sports stars. They’re just here to entertain you. They just want to have fun. These are just young men doing what young men do.’
And yet. And yet… If sportspeople are not role models, why were two of them speaking at my child’s primary school yesterday?
If sportspeople are not role models, why are they selling us everything from breakfast cereal to yoga pants?
If sportspeople are not role models, why do they appear as spokespeople in PSAs for causes from mental health to adult literacy?
If sportspeople are not role models, why do football clubs routinely partner with charities and big business?