Friday, October 18, 2024

“Think about if we had sufficient cash to cowl our hire”: Gold medallist Greg Stewart on the monetary realities of professional para sport

Carding cash, delivered by means of the Athlete Help Program, is a few of the solely constant funding Canadian elite para-athletes obtain. In 2024, it supplies $1,765 per thirty days as a dwelling and coaching allowance to athletes on the worldwide competitors stage. And though Olympians earn $20,000 for a gold medal, $15,000 for a silver medal and $10,000 for a bronze medal by means of funding from the Canadian Olympic Committee, Canadian Paralympians have by no means earlier than been paid for reaching the rostrum.

The cash panorama is beginning to change for athletes, nevertheless. Beginning with Paris 2024, Canadian Paralympic medallists will obtain the identical amount of cash as their Olympic counterparts. Sponsors like Toyota and Air Canada have additionally put important assets into sponsorships for athletes and their packages, and athletes are persevering with to advocate for extra money. So, what’s the monetary actuality of athletes who characterize our nation?

Picture courtesy of Greg Stewart

Gold medal–profitable shot putter Greg Stewart spoke to MoneySense concerning the fraught monetary atmosphere for para-athletes and his personal strategy to cash. At 38, he’s in his second go-round on the subject of Paralympic competitors, having received gold in shot put on the 2020 Paralympics in Tokyo. He was beforehand on Canada’s sitting volleyball crew—a pure match if you’re seven-foot-two—profitable bronze medals on the 2007 and 2011 Parapan American Video games. He beforehand received three world titles with the lads’s para standing volleyball crew.

Stewart retired from skilled sport in 2022, however he returned in 2024. He received silver on the World Para Athletics Championships in Might, solidifying his choice for Paris 2024. Stewart just lately co-wrote a e-book, Stand Out: The True Story of Paralympic Gold Medallist Greg Stewart (Kermode Training, 2024), and he’ll compete on the Summer time Video games in Paris on Sept. 4. As you’ll see on this interview, the monetary realities of competing are one thing he thinks about lots. (Interview has been condensed and flippantly edited.)

Inform me about your strategy to cash as a Paralympian?

My strategy has slowly been altering, now that society is beginning to view disabled individuals [better], to see us as equals. I believe we’re beginning to see that mirrored in how Paralympic or disabled athletes are handled. However on the identical time, there are nonetheless quite a lot of prices to [being a professional para-athlete]. Folks with disabilities are nonetheless underfunded when it comes to the prices of apparatus, supporting themselves, and their primary wants. When you’re a carded athlete, which may—may—assist pay for a bit of little bit of your hire. Nevertheless it’s not going wherever towards supporting your incapacity. 

Did funds play a task in your choice to retire in 2022?

Picture by Canadian Paralympic Group on Instagram

I selected to retire for 2 causes. I wished to spend extra time on the issues that mattered to me—and that was my associate and my revenue. Carding isn’t sufficient cash to pay in your hire and meals, not to mention every other actions that you’ve. So, retirement gave me the chance to begin to earn a dwelling, and to create extra of a resume, when it comes to truly hunkering down and incomes a paycheque. Realistically, although, the vast majority of athletes are targeted on attempting to get carded, interval, as a result of they imagine that’s going to be a supply of revenue they’ll depend on. [They think they won’t] have to fret about possibly choosing up that further shift as an athlete. 

What have been a few of these jobs that you just did?

I used to work for my prosthetist. And I used to work within the recycling trade, in automotive scrap. I did that for 3 years whereas I used to be competing. It helped pay for lots of issues throughout COVID. However it will require me to step away from coaching for per week or week-and-a-half each time. The issue I’ve is that we’re speaking about athletes, we’re speaking about individuals which are placing themselves on the market to characterize Canada. One of the best ways I might say it’s: we’re ambassadors for the nation. But, we’re in a 15-minutes-of-fame society in Canada. There’s no longevity to [sport in this country]. And if there may be, you as an athlete should make that longevity.

What impression do you see the rise in company funding having on Canadian para-sport athletes?

I believe it’s going to create a bit of bit extra competitors inside para sport, as a result of it’s difficult typically to seek out rivals, relying on the occasion. Once you present cash, individuals’s ears perk up. They begin to understand, OK, there’s extra to this than simply ardour. On the identical time, I additionally suppose that placing cash up entrance will doubtlessly create a bit of little bit of greed, a bit of little bit of corruption. That’s what cash does to everyone. So long as we could be conscious round that, then I believe actually good issues might occur.

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