fitness · Guest Post · running

Ontario, it’s time to move to equal distances for men and women in cross country (Guest post)

​by Leslie Sexton

With the fall cross country season approaching, it is time to continue the push towards gender equality in XC. Last year, the IAAF ruled that distances at the World Cross Country Championships will be 10 km for both senior men and senior women. In July, provincial branches voted to align Canadian Championship distances with IAAF World Championship distances and senior women will race 10k in Kingston this fall at the Canadian Championships.
Despite these changes at the national and international level, the senior women’s distance at the Athletics Ontario Cross Country Championships remains at 6k. It is time that Athletics Ontario committed to the principle of gender equality in cross country and equalized distances at the senior level (at the very least). Already 48 out of 50 states in the US have equalized girls and boys cross country distances at the high school level, and Ottawa has done the same in their OFSAA qualifiers. Therefore, I ask Athletics Ontario to be a leader and revisit not only the senior championship distances, but all championship distances for age groups older than Bantam (after which the gender disparity in racing distance begins, with the exception of the Masters race).
Nowhere else in distance running is this disparity present. On the track and in road racing, all distances are equal between men and women and there are anything but recent changes. The women’s marathon was added to the Olympics in 1984 and the women’s 10,000m was added in 1988. Only cross country remains several decades behind the times, with women racing 25-40% less distance, depending on the age group. It is time that cross country joined the 21st century and abandoned unequal distances as a relic of the past, as has been done in distance running on other surfaces.
It was shocking to me to see that despite this glaring inequality,  the AO championships are hosting a “day of girl power” with Fast and Female. I commend AO for their efforts in working with this organization, yet I have to question what kind of message AO is sending to young women when ‘Fast and Female Ambassadors’ are not allowed to race the same distances as their male counterparts. If we truly wish to empower and inspire girls through sport, we must stop presenting women’s cross country as a lesser version of the men’s events and put the principle of gender equality into practice.
I have emailed the above to Katie Ozolins (Executive Director of AO) and Randolph Fajardo (Competitions, Technical Specifications, and Logistics Manager at AO). I encourage others who support gender equality in cross country to contact Athletics Ontario staff and ask for change. Athletes and coaches need to speak up on this and make ourselves heard if we are to challenge the status quo.
AO staff email addresses can be found here: http://athleticsontario.ca/staff/

Photo by Maxine Gravina, Canadian Cross Country 2015

Leslie Sexton is a London, Ontario distance runner, a 2.33 marathoner, occasional pacer for hire, unapologetic geek. She’s on Word Press at lesliesexton.wordpress.com and on Twitter @LeslieSexton.

3 thoughts on “Ontario, it’s time to move to equal distances for men and women in cross country (Guest post)

  1. I’m glad to see the progress in this area and would love to continue to see it come. When I was in high school in Iowa the girls ran 2 miles and the boys 3.1. I always thought that 2 miles amounted to nothing when you think of “cross country”. How fast can you get across the country if you’re only doing 2 miles a time? Plus, as a distance runner and triathlete the distance wasn’t far enough for me to get into a good rhythm. It was like sprinting for 2 miles to keep up. Fingers crossed that it’s all equal sooner rather than later!

Comments are closed.