Tuesday 18 December 2012

Almost five months ago I wrote the following as a look-back comment at the Great Britain women's volleyball team's first-ever Olympic win. It is a summary of their financial and professional struggles, stating how they needed extra cash to convert what they had achieved into a long-term entity. Today they were told there would be no funding for the next Olympic cycle.

GB HOPE FOR MORE AFTER FIRST WIN

Few Olympians have got to where they are without sacrifice, but how many of them have built their dreams in the tight, boxed-up accommodation at an inner-city fire station remains to seen.

The answer is probably 12, for that is the size of the Great Britain women’s volleyball squad who last night defied all expectations to win the host nation’s first-ever indoor match in Games competition.

The reason why coach Audrey Cooper’s players have been forced to bunk down in two-bed dormitories is simple; money. Entirely self-funded since 2010, living at the South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Centre was a cost-effective way of staying together as a group.

It was there that they spoke of their Olympic ambitions, phoned local businesses begging for sponsorship and there that they plotted the downfall of Algeria - their historical maiden Olympics scalp.

The fact that it took them five sets to do so was of no surprise. The fact that the winning point came at 12.37am even less so. If anything, it was fitting. They squad have rarely done anything the easy way and adversity is the only way they know.

“There have been so many highs and lows over the last six years of our journey, there have been so many people, family and friends, to back us up when times have been tough. To get a win is fantastic and for everyone,” captain Lynne Beattie told Press Association Sport.

Although the most-played sport worldwide, volleyball is still very much a minority game in the home nations, with those charged with running it desperate to attract a new army of supporters.

Last night may have provided them with a breakthrough moment. The entire game was broadcast live on national television, while national radio picked up the last hour. Twitter was also awash with admirers and, the morning after, Volleyball England reported a spike in interest.

“We have fielded a lot more calls than usual today,” communications director Rob Harding told Press Association Sport.

“We have seen lots of requests coming in for information about the players and also information about where the sport can be accessed.

“We had hoped this would be the case and last year setup an involvement programme called ‘Go Spike’, designed to introduce people to the sport. We have been able to point people in the direction of that, and that’s been brilliant.”

The winning point last night came from a block by Grace Carter, a Nottingham-born 22-year-old who put her sports science degree on the backburner to concentrate on her career.

Her story is similar to nearly all of their team-mates. Thirty-one-year-old Jen Taylor gave up a teaching job and a home in the midlands to move to Yorkshire.

The squad have come close to quitting on several occasions, the nearest being when they were told their UK Sport funding was no more. Beattie persuaded them to continue via a late-night Skype conversation, though.

“I am so proud of these girls,” said British Volleyball’s performance director Kenny Barton.

“I was absolutely ecstatic when they got the win. They are such a wonderful bunch of girls who deserve all they get.”

Barton will meet with UK Sport in the aftermath of the Games, hoping to receive news of a return to funding. With an open invitation to join the World Championships from the FIVB on the table, and a 2016 Olympic qualifying campaign on the horizon, it will be needed.

“We have six cities looking to work with us to host a home World Championship qualifier in January,” Barton added. “We would have to fly the players back from their clubs so we will need meetings to work out the costs of that.

“We also want to qualify for Rio in our own right. To do that we need to keep our programme running. That costs money.”

There was no price on the scenes that greeted the end of last night’s match, though. The players stayed on court perhaps longer than usual, all draped in the Union flag, soaking in every moment.

To those watching they had beaten Algeria. But to those on the inside of a camp where every penny counts, they had beaten a side who, when they withdrew from a pre-tournament friendly at the 11th hour, cost them close to £10,000.

Such hard-luck stories are commonplace for this squad, but now, with an Olympic win on their resumes, they will hope for happier times ahead.
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