Former US Squash Associate Director Bob Kingsley Says 'Culture of Small Mindedness' Sunk Olympic Bid

December 10, 2013

Squash Unplugged

“Crossing our fingers for 2020”, “So very close for 2016…”, “pretty close in 2012…”,
“such an effort in 2008…”, “bad luck in 2004…..” Let’s get something straight.

Squash is not on the program of the Olympics today, largely because key people in the
sport’s US leadership did not want it there 20 plus years ago.

First, a little background.

In 1988 I was hired as the Associate Director of the United States Squash Racquets
Association, (USSRA.) My main goal was to pursue US Olympic Committee, (USOC)
membership for the USSRA, (now US Squash.) Leadership in our organization was so
convinced that our initial membership application would be rejected that I was sent alone,
with less than 6 months on the job, to the USOC membership review meeting in Houston.
When I left that meeting, having secured our membership in the first round, (something
rarely accomplished), a very senior USOC staff member walked me out of the room, put
his arm around my shoulder and whispered to me in a hallway crowded with other
applicants, “Where in the hell have you people been?” From the beginning, it seems we
were perceived as being very late to Olympic affiliation from those inside the USOC.
Over the next few years, we received monies and services from the USOC that funded
elite coaching, elite training and allowed for the free use of the United States Olympic
Training Center, (USOTC) in Colorado Springs where we sent coaches and players alike.
We even held one of our Executive Committee meetings at the USOTC where then
USOC Executive Director Harvey Schiller addressed our group and encouraged our
quick ascent in the organization. The USOTC went so far as to offer us free office space
to relocate our national headquarters onto the Colorado Springs campus.

I knew a political problem was brewing when the leadership of the USSRA refused that
invitation and I began to realize that my plight, my mission might be a fool’s errand.
A short history lesson will be helpful.

In the late 1980’s, squash in the US was struggling to maintain two versions of the game;
one that was played only in the states and the other, mainstream version played
throughout the rest of the world. Many in US squash leadership were firmly ensconced
in supporting, preserving and favoring the old and dying US-only version of the game.
The fear was that “the great unwashed” as one of them put it, would take over the
mainstream version of the sport and they would over-run and out number the traditional
ivy league, prep school, blue-blood, country club types and replace them with public
school, blue collar, beer drinking hooligans of unverified lineage.

The old-guard leadership sensed that they would not only lose their US-only version of
the sport, but their control of it as well because Olympic participation would surely be
played using the mainstream version of the game. Simultaneously, there was a large and
vocal segment of the squash community that was demanding the switch to the rest-of-theworld
version of the game and the leadership of US squash had to placate that growing
voice. By dispatching one man to do what the entire organization should have been
committed to doing, it created the illusion that US squash was forward thinking. That
was not the case. Some in leadership positions hoped that by understaffing and undercommitting
to the Olympic effort, it would end in futility, frustration and failure, thereby
preserving their hold on the US-only version of the sport. The old-guard of squash was
counting on the failure of our efforts towards the Olympics. The problem was, nobody
clued me and my small band of heretics into this plot and our efforts were making
unprecedented progress on a very fast track.

From our initial membership with the USOC in 1988 until my departure in 1991, I spent
most of my time on the road and had gathered a groundswell of support from the family
of Olympic sports organizations. During this same time, many more of the “great
unwashed”, had also entered the ranks of the US squash community, further rankling the
squash elites. I attended USOC, International Olympic Committee, (IOC) and
International Squash Rackets Federation, (ISRF) functions representing the interests of
Olympic participation for squash. We formed the Associac'ion Pan Americana de Squash
and began organizing international competitions throughout the Americas in support of
the Pan American games having squash on their program. Unfortunately those interests
were at odds with the old guard of US squash because we were, again, continuing to be
unexpectedly successful.

In 1991, I met personally with then IOC President, Juan Antonio Samaranch at the Pan
American games in Havana and he was extremely supportive. At last, all of the political,
social, formal and informal relationships were in place for squash to be accepted into the
inner circle of the Olympic movement. As Samaranch said, “The USOC is the flagship
of all (national Olympic committees)”, and at that moment in time, we were very much in
favor with the IOC and the USOC. However, the political power of an old guard of
squash elitists spanning nearly 100 years out-ranked and out-weighed a naive group of
pro-Olympic squash advocates with a single vision that blinded them to the political
reality that was far stronger and more ruthless than imagined.

When I was handed my resignation, the reality and the magnitude of the level of
resistance came clearly into focus. Shortly after my departure, other key players in the
movement were summarily dismissed as well. Once that momentum, that intricate
framework of personal, professional, probable and improbable relationships were left
unattended, the situation would crumble and the winding road so painstakingly built
would revert but to a faded path.

The conditions of that era are gone. The momentum and impact of a strong first
impression has but a single shot. The opportunities we enjoyed in the 80’s and 90’s are
not able to be recreated. The perfect storm for squash had, I fear, but one chance. The
deal making and networking we plied and perfected to make our inroads are opportunities
forever lost. Our efforts proved to be 20 some years too early. The elitist relics, born in
the age of antiquity that controlled US squash in the late 80’s and into the 90’s could see
clearly into the future, and what they saw was their relevance waning. I am saddened to
say that we failed to have squash included into the family of contested sports in an
Olympic program not because the game wasn’t worthy of such status, but because of a
culture of small mindedness that would sink a sport in order to protect a pedigree.

Bob Kingsley is the former Associate Director of the USSRA, (now US Squash) from
1988 until 1991.

© 2012 All Rights Reserved, Robert T. Kingsley





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