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Tracey Holmes wins IOC journalism award

ABC sports journalist is the first to be awarded the 2021 Women and Sports Award for Oceania.

ABC sports journalist Tracey Holmes has been awarded the 2021 Women and Sports Award for Oceania by the International Olympic Committee.

Holmes is the first journalist to win the prestigious award, which the IOC said recognises her contribution to reporting on women’s sport and mentorship for the next generation of women sports journalists.

“In 1989 I started a weekly segment on the ABC called ‘Women in Sport’, now the ABC has a 50:50 project for its coverage and the sports department is the standout performer,” Holmes said.

“This award is a tribute to all those women athletes and women sports administrators who persevered without money, coverage or recognition to create a world today where women in many countries can do and can be whatever they so choose.

“It is also a tribute to my mother and father, from whom I learned we are all equal, and it is a tribute to all those – many of them men – who freely offered their mentorship and guidance throughout my career.”

Kevan Gosper, honorary IOC member from Australia, added,  “This is also an important acknowledgement by the IOC and the Women in Sport Commission recognising and rewarding the essential role the media play in how women in sport are portrayed and ensuring the equal coverage of women’s sport and sportswomen by the media.”

A trailblazer for 30 years, Holmes was the first woman to be appointed as a sports broadcast trainee at the ABC and went on to become the first female reporter in its national sports department and the first host, male or female, of a national sports program, ABC Grandstand. The Women in Sport program was influential in increasing coverage of women’s sport in Australia.

As well as her broadcast and digital reporting Holmes hosts award-winning weekly sports show and podcast The Ticket. She is currently in Beijing reporting for the ABC on the Winter Olympics.

7 Responses

  1. Congratulations Tracey. I don’t always listen to her show on Radio National, but when I do catch it, it is an intellectual powerhouse on what most people think of as the most unlikely intellectual thing – sport.

    Imagine the discussion that go on in her house with her and Stan Grant chewing the fat at night time. Two big picture minds with great intellect.

  2. … gee, now I’m disappointed David … the IOC awarded me a Certificate of Olympic Merit “in recognition of services rendered to the Olympic Movement for the Games of the XXVII Olympiad in Sydney” but you didn’t run a story about me!!!

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