World Athletics is trying to Increase the number of female coaches at World Championships “by encouraging member Federations to send more female coaches, and providing the learning pathway in countries where women are underrepresented at the coaching level.”

(This is the second and final part of this report. Read the first part here).

For the 2019 African U-18 and U-20 Championships in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, 11 coaches (nine male and two female) made the trip, with the two females being Ojokolo-Akpeki and Osakwe. For the African Games in Rabat, Morocco, Ojokolo-Akpeki was once again the only female coach selected to the team, alongside five male coaches. She thereafter made it to the World Championships in Doha, Qatar, as the only woman out of the eight coaches selected.

The outbreak of the coronavirus in 2020 put a pause on competitions and global travels as the world grappled with the realities of the pandemic. The Tokyo 2020 Olympics was moved to 2021. Eventually, an all-male coaching crew made up of five individuals, was selected to travel with the Athletics team to Tokyo. Even though her athlete, Itsekiri, was one of the sprinters representing Nigeria in Tokyo, Ojokolo-Akpeki was not invited for the trip. She would later be included in the team for the World U20 Championships a month later in Nairobi as the only female coach.

The AFN participated in four major competitions in 2022. The African Senior Championships in Mauritius and the World Athletics Championships in Oregon, USA (where Tobi Amusan would shatter the world record in the 100 metres hurdles) had four male coaches. The World U20 Championships in Cali, Colombia also had four coaches but one of them this time was a female and the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham in the United Kingdom also had one female among the five coaches. Each of these competitions had one female coach in attendance, but the biggest of them, the World Championships, was a male affair.

Where is the equity?

These statistics upsets Ojokolo-Akpeki. She said including more female coaches in these events would encourage more women to venture into coaching. “The number one reason many female coaches are not encouraged to stick with this career is the lack of support, and what I mean by support is about the Federation having your back,” she said.

“There are not many female coaches. There are about 10 of us in the country that I know of right now, but we are not being encouraged and supported. We need exposure. We can only get better when we are exposed, but we are not getting that from the Federation. A lot of the time you see a team consisting of four male coaches and one female coach, or none at all; where is the gender equity? These are some of the reasons women give up on coaching, because we are not getting the right support.”

An AFN official who did not want to be named, noted that World Athletics has made it compulsory for federations running duly accredited coaching courses to have at least 30 per cent female participation, in a bid to bridge the gender gap in coaching.In a press release to commemorate the 2023 International Women’s Day, World Athletics reaffirmed their commitment to provide more opportunities to empower girls and women across the world via their #WeGrowAthletics campaign.

Part of the statement goes thus: “World Athletics pledges to Increase the number of female coaches at our World Championships to at least 20 per cent by the World Athletics Championships Tokyo 2025 by encouraging Member Federations to send more female coaches, and providing the learning pathway in countries where women are underrepresented at the coaching level.”

Oyase states that these provisions made by World Athletics have proven to be the saving grace of female athletics coaches in Nigeria. She said: “A lot of the time, our federation acts like they do not trust us or even see the efforts we make, as though it is only the male coaches that are knowledgeable. This is a very tedious job. If not for the fact that World Athletics has a charter that gives us female coaches a quota, we will not be considered for anything.”

However, responding to insinuations that female Athletics coaches are not being fairly considered for international meets, AFN’s current Chief Coach, Seigha Porbeni, said the federation is left with little or no choice as only few female coaches meet the selection criteria.

He said: “The first factor that earns a coach an invitation would be the number of athletes that coach has on the team; it shows competence and productivity. Secondly, there needs to be a national spread for everyone to be carried along, so that it’s not only coaches from a particular region of the country that make the team. Also, the coach should not be of questionable character, because they’re going to be with other people’s children and need to be regarded as mentors. These are some of the areas we consider, amongst others.”

The only woman to have served as AFN’s Head Coach, Edet, agreed that female coaches have not been given adequate opportunity to prove themselves.

She said: “There are female coaches that work with the states and are hard working. After all, the Federation does not have athletes. All of the athletes selected to represent the country come from the states, and have coaches who discovered and nurtured them to the level they are. They need to be reached out to. The AFN board I worked with, the Federation invites some of these female coaches to camp but ends up dropping them when it’s time to travel. What’s the rationale? Besides, there has been a trend of taking coaches who had no business being on the team to international competitions, and we end up coming back with nothing.”

Edet, who was honoured by World Athletics at its 47th Congress held in Berlin in 2009, and received the prestigious IAAF Veteran Pin “for long and meritorious service to the cause of world athletics”, stated the importance of having more women in teams to international tournaments.”There should at least be a chaperone on every team to look out for the interest of the female athletes, but sometimes they are knocked off because people from the sports ministry want to travel,” she stated. “They end up using someone in the ministry who is not even used to the athletes. Even if you are not going to bring a female coach to serve in her capacity as a coach, bring her in as a chaperone, because she already knows these athletes. That way, there will be discipline.

“Also, she would serve as someone the athletes can confide in in case there are any issues, which will yield positive results, because the female athletes have rest of mind; nothing is disturbing them and having her there will allay their fears. I was the chaperone at the 1984 Olympic Games; I also attended the Atlanta ’96 Olympics and then led the team to the 2000 Games in Sydney.”

Long road towards gender equality

Having acknowledged the disparity in the ratio of male to female coaches globally, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in collaboration with international sporting federations, sought to bridge that gap and increase the representation of women coaches at elite levels as a matter of urgency.

The IOC launched a four-year programme tagged WISH – the Women in Sport High-performance pathway programme – which is being supported by $1 million in Olympic Solidarity funding and aimed at equipping 100 women for coaching at elite levels (Olympic, World Championship and continental teams) by 2024.

According to the IOC, “The programme is designed to help female coaches develop their leadership skills, confidence and careers. Mentoring is also a very important part of the programme. Coaches benefit from one-to-one leadership mentoring plus ongoing support from a sport-specific mentor. Such expert advice and feedback on real-life challenges can be invaluable to any coach, let alone a woman striving to perform at the top of her game in a male-dominated environment.”

Interestingly, Ojokolo-Akpeki is one of eight Athletics coaches (from across the world) selected for this programme, which she described as transformational. In an interview with worldathletics.org, she said: “When I was called by the Nigerian Olympic Committee (NOC) to be a part of this programme, I was so excited because I knew this was another opportunity for me to empower myself. It was like a dream come true. The one-week residential training felt like a lifetime of learning. What I gained in one week, some people spend a lifetime trying to achieve the same.