Guardian Weekly

Can period tracking help athletes win?

It should have been a show of British sporting dominance when Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita made it to the 100-metre final of the European Championedly, ships in August. Then, unexpect Asher-Smith pulled up and Neita was not quick enough for the gold, both because of cramps. Later, Asher-Smith revealed hers to be a symptom of her period and shared her frustration at its impact on her sport. If it were a men’s issue, she argued, it would have been fixed by now.

It is a feeling shared by many fellow athletes and coaches, including Chelsea FC’s manager, Emma Hayes. “Once a month for potentially up to around five days, many female players have an event that can cause significant distress and impact heavily on their performance,” she

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guardian Weekly

Guardian Weekly2 min read
Country Diary Wolsingham
From a distance, the pavement seemed to be crawling with enormous caterpillars, but these are unripe male catkins at my feet, torn down by stormy weather from a Lombardy poplar’s twigs 12 metres above my head. High winds have gifted me the most colou
Guardian Weekly2 min read
№ 265 Chipotle Chicken With Black-eyed Bean Salsa
Prep 25 min Marinate 1 hr+ Cook 1hr 10 min Serves 6-8 GLUTEN FREE 8 chicken thighs3 onions (500g), peeled and cut in half through the root, then each half cut into three lengthwise 200g jarred roastred peppers (drained weight)½ tsp ground cinnamon1 ½
Guardian Weekly3 min readWorld
‘We’re Very Welcome’
A woman is standing next to a group of Holocaust survivors and their descendants in Trafalgar Square in London, live-streaming her challenge to the pro-Palestine marchers on her phone. “Why will none of you condemn Hamas?” she repeats several times.

Related Books & Audiobooks