When Loyalty Becomes Subservience: What Are We Teaching Athletes? Titelbild

When Loyalty Becomes Subservience: What Are We Teaching Athletes?

When Loyalty Becomes Subservience: What Are We Teaching Athletes?

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Start with the truth: predictable brackets and politicized access are draining the joy out of elite Taekwondo. We gather as coaches and former athletes to unpack why the Grand Prix Challenge felt like an expensive detour, why the World Championships and U21 Worlds lacked edge, and how rankings turned into the goal instead of the game. The throughline isn’t athlete effort; it’s incentives, rules, and leadership choices that reward safe structures over real competition.

We get specific. The field needs uncertainty back, so we argue for a smarter bracket model—protect the top four or eight, then randomize the rest—to bring genuine tests from round one. We challenge the two-year Olympic point reset: shortening the cycle doesn’t level the field if you add more events and costs. And we drill into the funding gap at home, where academy athletes often receive support and similarly ranked independents don’t. If you qualify for a Grand Prix, you’re among the nation’s best—support should follow, regardless of training address.

Rules matter because identity matters. Forcing “action” with verbal commands and mutual deductions kills style diversity, the soul of fighting. Timing, distance, counterplay—these should be allowed to breathe. We welcome fewer head-touch protests and call for simpler scoring that reflects real impact: punch 1, body 2, head 3. Let fighters solve each other; stop choreographing the sport to appease a spectator who isn’t there.

We also talk culture. Cronyism and credential gatekeeping mute voices that could move Taekwondo forward. Collaboration between organizations should align calendars and raise standards, not police speech. That’s why we’re launching the SNS Awards—to celebrate athletes, coaches, programs, and administrators who push the sport in the right direction, while naming practices that hold it back.

If you care about fair pathways, honest scoring, and real development, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with your team, and tell us the one change you’d make first. Your take might shape the next SNS Award—and the season ahead.

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