Our Sportspeople Deal with Life Outside the Bubble
By Imago Group
Tuesday 11 July, 2006
When it comes to life-after-sport, the typical athlete can face a range of unfamiliar
issues from the traumatic - such as depression, mental illness and alcohol abuse - to the mundane;
financial concerns and what-to-do-next questions.
SydneyThe weight of responsibility and pressure under which such managers
operate is a key topic to be addressed by, among others, La Trobe University Lecturer, Sonia
Francis, at Sport Knowledge Australia's "Best Practice Player Welfare"
Seminar on 31 August at Sydney Olympic Park.
"There is a growing interest in the future direction of player welfare and there has been
considerable dialogue over the last decade, at all levels of sport, about athlete-employer
relationships," says Francis.
"Up until now, there has never really been an educational study of where player welfare has
come from or where it's going."
"The Sport Knowledge Australia seminar aims to take a viewpoint that is independent
of sporting bodies and player associations to present an unbiased, and research-based analysis
of current best practices from across the industry."
Read brochure
http://www.sportedu.org/documents/PW01.pdf.
Francis will present her new research study at the seminar at Sydney Olympic Park on 31 August
which will delve into issues surrounding life after sport, covering competitive edge practice
as well as issues faced by today's players and administrators while casting ahead over the next
decade.
The SKA seminar will also feature a presentation by University of NSW Associate Professor Braham
Dabscheck - a luminary in the area of industrial relations in team sports. Dabscheck has consulted
to the International Federation of Professional Footballers' Associations and been called as an
expert witness in cases involving challenges to controls on the employment of players.
Jeff Bond, head of Psychology at the Australian Institute of Sport for 22 years up until 2004,
will present on topics which include athletes’ retirement needs. Highly regarded in his
profession, in 2000 Bond became the first sport psychologist to be awarded Fellowship of the
Australian Psychological Society. He is also received the Australian Sports Medal in 2000 and
2005.
Providing a combined academic and industry leading-edge insight at the seminar will be Yvonne
Soper, National Player Development Manager for the Rugby Union Players Association of Australia.
Soper has consulted to the Australian Olympic Weightlifting team and prior to joining RUPA
worked at the South Australian Institute of Sport on the Athlete Career and
Education program.
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