Tuesday 18 December 2012

Cycling to get increased funding

Cycling, triathlon and netball have been given increased grassroots funding, but tennis, cricket and rugby have seen their money cut.

Sport England has also given tennis, as well as swimming and basketball, just one-year guaranteed finance with the rest dependent on results.

The body will give £493m to grassroots sports between 2013-17, up £54.7m. 

Out of 46 sports, 32 have seen rises in funding, with 11 receiving less money and three getting the same amount.

Top five increases:

Cycling: Up by £7.3m to £32m

Netball: £6.6m to £25.3m

Football: £4.4m to £30m

Triathlon: £2.8m to £7.5m

Equestrian: £1.9m to £6m

Top five decreases:

Rugby League: Down by £10.1m to £17.5m

Rugby Union: £8.8m to £20m

Cricket: £7.7m to £27.5m

Tennis: £7.1m to £17.4m

Judo: £3.8m to £6.1m

Big winners were cycling, triathlon and netball, whose funds will increase by more than 30% after they impressed with future plans.

Boxing has also benefited, seeing a 26% rise to £5.8m.

Richard Caborn, chairman of the Amateur Boxing Association of England, said: "Boxing is one of the few sports that has continually delivered increases in grassroots participation over the last four years and it is great to see that this achievement has been recognised in the new funding announcement."

But the Lawn Tennis Association's four-year plan for increasing the numbers of people playing the sport was described as "not strong enough" and £10.3m of its £17.4m total has been put on hold.

Sport England chief executive Jennie Price said: "Tennis has not performed well in terms of participation.

"Their plan simply wasn't strong enough to justify the four-year investment. They have only a one-year award for participation and they have to improve their plan for growing participation."

The LTA said it was on the right track but admitted there was still work to be done.

Swimming and basketball will have funding withheld as well, while Sport England assesses whether new participation plans are working.

David Sparkes, chief executive of the Amateur Swimming Association, said: "While we are disappointed with the one-year investment for participation, we are encouraged by the confidence Sport England has shown in our plans to increase swimming participation levels over the next four years."

Sport England said officials from cricket, rugby union and rugby league were "comfortable" with their funding cuts. It said the reductions were largely due to the end of spending on "large capital projects" between 2009 and 2013.

RFL chief executive Nigel Wood said: "We will now be looking carefully at the award details of [our] new Whole Sport plan to see how we take our important community and talent development work forward with the support of Sport England, and naturally we are disappointed that rugby league has not been able to maintain the previous level of funding."

Overall, the bulk of the funding is aimed at 14-25 year-olds, with £83m to help talented athletes get access to better facilities and coaching.

Key figures include:

Cycling up by £7.3m from £24.7 to £32m after their Sky Ride  initiative saw a huge increase in cycling numbers. Netball up to £25.3m from £18.7m after they "showed an understanding what women want from sport" to increase their participation numbers. Triathlon up by £2.8m from £4.7m to £7.5m after a dramatic increase in participants. Handball, which has seen a huge participation increase since London 2012, has seen their investment doubled from £0.6m to £1.2m. Cricket investment is down by £15.2m to £20m, although there will be a further £7.5m investment in the Cricket Foundation  Both rugby league and rugby union have had their funding cut by £10.1m and £8.8m respectively.

Figures released earlier this month showed 15.5 million people aged 16 and over were playing sport at least once a week - 750,000 more than a year ago and 1.57 million more than when London won the Olympic and Paralympic bid in 2005.

Image of Gordon Farquhar Gordon Farquhar BBC sports news correspondent

"The conditions being attached to continued funding for swimming and tennis, plus the cuts to grants for cricket and both codes of rugby, are a reflection of the demand from government to get a return on its investments. Sports like cycling, triathlon and netball - who have strongly targeted participation with creative schemes - are seeing their efforts rewarded. It's a classic case of carrot and stick"

However the figures also showed the number of 16- to 19-year-olds participating in sport three times a week had dropped from 930,400 to 825,900.

Sport England's chief executive, Jennie Price, said: "We've learned a lot over the last four years and, with a record 15.5 million people already playing sport once a week, we are on track to deliver. We have worked very hard with the governing bodies of sport to make these decisions."

In total 46 sports will receive investment through each sport's governing body following a "robust and challenging process" to assess the quality of their plans and their ability to deliver for community sport and talent development.

Each sport will be subject to "tough performance management" through a "payment for results" approach that will see Sport England rewarding success and penalising failure.

Sport England's funding is separate to that of UK Sport, which will announce how it will disperse its money for elite Olympic athletes on Tuesday.


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