New participation figures1 published by Sport England
paint a mixed picture of progress in grassroots sport, with strong
growth in running and cycling but a decline in other major sports,
including football and swimming.
Overall, the slow but steady increase in participation numbers
seen over the past five years continues, with 6,938,000
people2 now taking part in sport at least three times a
week. Today’s Active People Survey results show that regular
participation is now 123,000 closer to the Government’s aim to get
one million people playing more sport by 2012/133
Weekly participation in athletics (including running) has
swelled by over 263,000 over the past two years, buoyed by a
growing network of informal running groups across the country. Over
the same period, cycling’s numbers are up by almost 100,000.
British Cycling’s Chief Executive, Ian Drake, said:
“We put great stock on trying to ensure our participation
initiatives truly meet the needs of those we’re hoping to get
involved in our sport. Indeed, we can partly put the continued
success of Sky Ride down to the fact that we listen to participants
and adapt our offerings based on the feedback we receive. We’re
committed to getting more people on their bikes and importantly,
keeping them cycling. What is particularly exciting for us is that
we’re confident there’s plenty more to come and throughout 2011 we
will be launching more new initiatives to help get more people
cycling more regularly.”
Netball’s participant numbers are up by over 26,000, an increase
of a fifth in the size of the sport in two years. Much of this
success comes from the Back to Netball programme, which tempts
women to return to the sport with a fun and flexible offer.
This is just one of the initiatives that have contributed to a
recovery in women’s participation in 2010, but the gender gap in
sport remains a challenge.
Of real concern, however, is the continued under-performance of
five of the top seven participation sports, including the only
sports with more than two million weekly participants - swimming
and football. Their size means that this decline has a major impact
on the overall growth of grassroots sport.
For these two – and other sports such as cricket and rugby – the
challenge is to arrest the drop in participation outside the club
structures where they have traditionally focused most of their
attention.
The past 12 months have also been a tough period for sports that
are costly and time-consuming such as golf, sailing and skiing.
There has been a marked drop in participation in these activities
among men aged between 35 and 44, a key period of economic
productivity in most people’s lives.
Sport England’s Chief Executive, Jennie Price, said:
“It would be fair to describe today’s results as a mixed bag.
It’s good to see a wide range of sports – from individual pursuits
like running to small team sports like lacrosse - demonstrating
that, with the right approach, increasing grassroots participation
is a realistic ambition.
“What is concerning, however, is that a number of major sports
have yet to deliver, despite significant levels of investment. They
now urgently need to demonstrate their ability to grow
participation in their sport and prove they can make a significant
contribution to sport at the grassroots level.”
The Minister for Sport and the Olympics, Hugh Robertson MP,
said:
“During the comprehensive spending review we fought hard to get
a good settlement for sport, keeping the Whole Sport Plans in
place. Now it is vital to see a return from the investment sports
get from the public purse. I want every pound that national
governing bodies spend on the grassroots to count.
“Our recently launched ‘Places People Play’ strategy will help
get more people participating but we also need sports governing
bodies to step up to the plate and deliver. Some sports are making
progress such as athletics and netball and we need to learn lessons
from them to get growth across the board.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
- Once-a-month participation in lacrosse has risen from 8,400 to
13,300 over the past two years. Participation numbers are currently
too small to provide a robust weekly measure via the Active People
Survey (APS).
- Sport England is now 18 months into a four-year investment
period for 46 sports’ national governing bodies. The sports have
been set individual targets to increase participation over the four
years, with the latest sport-by-sport figures also published
on our website today. Baselines were set
by the APS2 results.
- Sport England is focused on the delivery of a mass
participation legacy from the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. We
invest National Lottery and Exchequer funding in organisations and
projects that will grow and sustain participation in grassroots
sport and create opportunities for people to excel at their chosen
sport