“Sadly recent media does not help encourage sporting sponsorships.” With that — and an expression of their earnest desire to not “add to netball’s disunity problems” — Gina Rinehart’s companies Hancock Prospecting and Roy Hill took their $15 million off Netball Australia’s balance sheet.
The problem, Rinehart said in separate comments, is that sport should not be used to push social or political views, implying that must have been the motivation behind Indigenous netballer Donnell Wallam’s concerns about wearing the Hancock name on her uniform when she debuts for Australia next week.
Confusion abounds, as commentators try to find some stable ethical ground between Wallam’s stand, that of Australian cricket captain Pat Cummins (who has reportedly expressed disquiet about Alinta Energy’s sponsorship of his team), and the seven Manly Warringah rugby league players who recently refused to wear their club’s rainbow jersey because it offended their religious beliefs about LGBTQIA+ people.
It would help, of course, if we stuck to the facts and resisted the temptation to project; precisely what Rinehart failed to do when she threw her toys out of the cot. Her statements attempt to reframe the story as an objection to sponsorship by mining companies, but Wallam and her teammates who stood in support of her never raised an objection on that basis.
The issue, about which Wallam was explicit, focused exclusively on the Hancock name — because it comes from Rinehart’s father and company founder, Lang Hancock. Wallam has an issue, she said, with comments he made in the 1980s. In an interview, Hancock addressed the “Aboriginal problem” in these terms:
The ones that are no good to themselves and can’t accept things, the half-castes — and this is where most of the trouble comes — I would dope the water up so that they were sterile and would breed themselves out in future and that would solve the problem.
Well, you’ll either understand Wallam’s concern, or you won’t. There’s no point trying to convince anyone either way.
The issue is very specific and has neither relationship nor relevance to what Rinehart was claiming, nor to the question of whether Cricket Australia should be accepting money from Alinta.
But what are we to do with all this? The sports-media cartel is uniformly panicked and loudly predicting the end of professional sport altogether if this trend of allowing the “personal brand” of athletes to dictate sponsor selection is allowed to continue. Where, they ask, will the money come from, you idiots?
There are a couple of things one can say about this amoral panic. First, we’ve heard it before. In the 1970s–80s, professional sport was almost entirely funded by tobacco companies — remember that? Sporting bodies decried the moves to abolish tobacco sponsorship, because where would the money come from then? Largely, it came from alcohol companies. Then online gambling companies. What it never did was stop flowing.
One thing of which we can be sure is that if there is a commercial benefit to corporate sponsorship of sport, that sponsorship will exist. If no such benefit exists, meaning the dollars don’t add up, then that begs a different question. If swimming, netball, volleyball or any other sport relying on what is essentially corporate philanthropy can’t “survive” otherwise, then it isn’t a business, it’s a charity.
The second point is that you can’t put the genie back in the bottle. Like it or not, athletes have opinions, values and beliefs. They are employees, yes, and can be contractually constrained in their expression and performance of those beliefs. They have no greater right than anyone else to act inconsistently with the commercial imperatives of their employers, subject to such protection as they get from anti-discrimination laws.
But, again, the practical reality comes down to the law of supply and demand. Cricket Australia can’t sack Pat Cummins for voicing his objection to carbon-spewing money, because he has cultural and commercial power that makes him more or less immune. That’s the real reason for the disconcertment in the boardroom. By contrast, the Manly players were simply stood down, although the ensuing drama ended up taking out their coach.
As for netball, the problem is simple. Wallam had every right to speak up, and her fellow players were right to support her. Rinehart could have handled the situation differently, by acknowledging the real pain Wallam was in and offering an open-handed path to talking about and resolving the issue of its cause. Instead, she walked, complaining about the evils of “virtue signalling”. So be it. Netball will survive, either with buckets of money enabling it to keep its top players well paid and internationally competitive, or with no money and a return to merely being the biggest children’s participation sport in Australia.
Either way, the climate will continue to degrade and racism will not be eradicated. Sport, with uniforms emblazoned by sponsors’ logos or not, will go on.
There is an implication in this otherwise worthy article that Gina Rinehart could simply have discussed the issue with the netball players and reached a compromise. Umm… We’re talking about Gina Rinehart here. She is wealthy beyond belief, and most of the obscenely wealthy do not discuss, do not compromise, and do not try to understand. Worship and fawning gratitude are what is expected, and if the ungrateful peasants are not happy with their lot, then let them starve.
Yes, this is the woman who wanted everyone to work for $2 an hour and was prepared to import migrants to do that; and the woman who stood on a ute in the middle of St George’s Terrace to scream the the proposed mining tax was going to ruin her business! It was so sad, my husband and I thought we might have to write her a cheque to help out!
Yep, just ask her kids, whom she ripped off by changing Lang’s will. What mother would rip off her own kids? Most mothers would sacrifice for their kids. The only exception I can think of are the desperate junkies who pawn the kids Christmas presents from under the tree because they’re desperate for a fix. Gina doesn’t even have that excuse. Just a bully.
That’s exactly what we’ve been doing by not taking CC seriously.
If any
Almost, but look at what professional or “elite” sports promote, now or in recent decades through these deals. As the article says, tobacco, alcohol and gambling corporations. Also, fossil fuel and other extractive industries with a dire record of reckless environmental destruction. And perhaps deserving to go top of the list, some murderous and viciously oppressive dictatorships too. So I would not say these sports are charities, even if they are dependent on funds from these sources. Rather, they are public relations companies that offer their mostly despicable clients a particular and specialised white-washing service.
But Bradley’s conclusion is completely correct. Sport will go on even if denied any income from such sources. Also, it will be all the better for it.
My biggest question in all this is “why are professional sports persons (more in the cases of men than women) paid millions (or is it even billions in a lifetime?) of dollars (or whatever relevant currencies)? We cannot carry on with this craziness!
Wanna bet?
If you look at the way the survivors of the NRL walk and talk I think that we need to pay them a lot because they never will be normal again.
I hate gladiator sports.
I am only going off media reporting, but apparently the players also had a problem with Ms Rinehart’s climate change denialism.
“The players’ questioning of Hancock Prospecting’s ideals relating to climate change further made them uncomfortable with the association.” (source: https://7news.com.au/sport/netball/netball-in-turmoil-as-gina-rineharts-hancock-prospecting-pulls-ground-breaking-15m-sponsorship-c-8625264)
I agree with Michael though, it was a lost opportunity to disavow Lang Hancock’s despicable views if she doesn’t share them.
Being against racism isn’t really a matter of virtue signalling, even in a minimally descriptive sense, as people really don’t really need to signal to others that things like sterilising a particular race is actually a bad thing. At a minimum that stance should be taken as a bare minimum as being a decent human being – even if it may exclude you running a Victorian football club.
Let alone the idea of virtue signalling in the pejorative sense used here. It would be a troubled mind to think that the only reason to be against racism would be to signal to others that racism is bad. Again, no-one outside a Victorian football club leadership position needs to make that signal.
The idea of ‘virtue signalling’ is useful in that it indicates the shallowness of those who use the term.
Yeah.
Use of terms like ‘virtue signalling’, political correctness’ and ‘woke’ serve as a warning to me.
Hancock had an opportunity to offer her own apology, for her bigoted father’s comments. Presumably she agrees with him, if all that righteous indignation is a guide. it would appear that intelligent discourse is beyond some people.
The resources belong to the Australian people. Nationalise them.
“Hancock had an opportunity to offer her own apology, for her bigoted father’s comments. Presumably she agrees with him, if all that righteous indignation is a guide.”
Why should she apologise for something someone else said? Her father was the person with the odious view, not her, and it seems unreasonable to ask people to account for and repudiate views held by others or face guilt by association.
“Her father was the person with the odious view, not her, and it seems unreasonable to ask people to account for and repudiate views held by others or face guilt by association”
Very true and yet that is precisely what the virtue-signalling lefties are calling for! Now people are to blame for anything that their parents either did or said apparently.
I don’t blame Rinehart one bit for pulling her sponsorship. Maybe the mouthy little “virtuous” Netballers will learn that everything has a price.
She didn’t have to apologise or repudiate his views, Lex.
The netballers offered other solutions to the impasse, one of which was Hancock Prospecting simply distancing itself from the comments, something along the lines of “that attitude does not reflect who we are today”.
Another solution was Wallam being exempted from wearing the logo and she gave up on that and agreed to wear it anyway to hold onto the sponsorship.
The third was suspending the talks until the current round of matches had been played.
All sensible compromises, I think, but Rinehart refused to compromise at all. It was her way or the highway.
Leaves me with the impression that she agreed with her daddy when she was 30 and she agrees with him now.
Makes me wonder where she spent the 70s and 80s, too, that she thinks politics in sport is something new. I’d have thought the mining world small enough for South Africans to have set her straight by now. Perhaps they tried and she wouldn’t listen. She doesn’t seem the type to listen, does she?
Again, this is a commercial arrangement with Netball Australia, not the Players. They are employees. No Advertising, no Sponsorship. Simple.
What Hancock said years ago has no bearing on Rinehart whatsoever. Guilt by association yet again which just disgusts me.
Another alternative would have been the player with the problem to find another team sport. Don’t like it then don’t play! It’s called FIFO. Fit in or f… Off!
There is a price for everything in this world (including free speech) and Netball is struggling and will continue to do so. If you think this sort of publicity attracts Sponsors, you are very much mistaken.
Why should a talented player of any sport be the one who has to choose between keeping quiet or walking away???
Because, sport is a business and NA, in particular, is going backwards and needed that sponsorship. You can have your views but if they negatively impact your employer why should the employer tolerate you? Nobody is irreplaceable and staff do not decide who is an acceptable sponsor, management does.
Only Government Employees think they can do what they like. You can have your views but don’t expect your employer to bear the cost of them. FIFO.
So, the best players should walk away from the sport if they don’t like the companies that are funding it?
Good plan. We get to see sport played by sycophants instead of the top players in the field… That should really boost ratings.
Netball is gasping for air so they can’t afford to turn away sponsors.
We all do this in the course of our employment, if we cannot support the employer we find a new one. She had a simple choice she chose one path and is now having trouble dealing with the consequences.
Choices have consequences because we are adults.
It’s a bit tricky though. If decent numbers of your best players are walking, you becime a loser, and losers have more trouble attracting lucrative sponsors and TV deals, and other sports can become more attractive in the community which impacts the quality of future players.
If you’d read the article you would have realised that netball isn’t in trouble. It’s the sport that has the highest participation of any sport in Australia.
As far as I’m concerned, I’d be happy for all advertising around sport to cease. Football grounds called stupid betting company names so we don’t have a clue where the match is being held.. press conferences where the participants are almost invisible because of the massive branding…
It’s a cancer that is eating away at the reason sport is played at all.
So, dump the advertising, get to your local club and play sport for the enjoyment. Simple.
Don’t disagree that we shouldn’t have professional sport but that isn’t reality. Most local clubs have sponsorship too BTW.
Netball Australia is most certainly in trouble.
I believe one of her best mates is the none other than the Beet rooter, Mr. Barnaby Joyce
She is the one who wants to put his name on the back of an Indigenous netball player. It doesn’t seem a big thing to ask for her to confirm that she doesn’t agree with those comments or in fact, let that player play without advertising her racist father’s name.
“It doesn’t seem a big thing to ask for her to confirm that she doesn’t agree with those comments”
Agreed, but I didn’t say anything about confirming she doesn’t hold them, but about apologising for them. There’s big difference there!
Agree that she shouldn’t have to apologise for them but I don’t think the players were insisting on that were they?
She could publicly say that she disagrees with her father’s thoughts. Didn’t she allegedly shaft him in his later years?
Of course she could do it (it would be a trivial thing for her to do), but the presumption that she needs to do it is very “sins of the father” type thinking.
As anyone who has seen relatives post on Facebook, how much responsibility do any of us want to take for what crazy awful things our relatives say? Guilt by association is a slippery slope that none of us really want to be on.
She had the choice to accept his money or walk away. She accepted.
She had the choice to repudiate her father’s words, as she was head of the company he started… she didn’t.
This isn’t some argument over a family dinner.