ajn1610
Well-Known Member
Reading the news section about equestrian employers got me thinking, so I did a couple of internet searches and this is what I found....
From H and H news: 19,000 equestrian businesses employer 41,000 (for comparison network rail employment figures are 32,000)
BHS: 2.4 million people ride regularly (1.5 million people play golf once a month or more)
150,000 people attend Burghleys and at Badminton in excess of 250,000 turn up for XC day making it the most attended of any paid entry sport event in the UK (wikepedia)
I haven't looked at SJ, Dressage or Race meets but I'm sure they have similar pictures.
So why is it equestrianism is continually classed as a minority sport? Is it purely because we don't get television coverage? I know the numbers aren't up there with something like football but even so I think our major events get sidelined because of this misconception, when other arguably less popular sports get hours of coverage. I know the cost of televising cross country is high but what we get still seem disproportionate to me.
Any thoughts?
From H and H news: 19,000 equestrian businesses employer 41,000 (for comparison network rail employment figures are 32,000)
BHS: 2.4 million people ride regularly (1.5 million people play golf once a month or more)
150,000 people attend Burghleys and at Badminton in excess of 250,000 turn up for XC day making it the most attended of any paid entry sport event in the UK (wikepedia)
I haven't looked at SJ, Dressage or Race meets but I'm sure they have similar pictures.
So why is it equestrianism is continually classed as a minority sport? Is it purely because we don't get television coverage? I know the numbers aren't up there with something like football but even so I think our major events get sidelined because of this misconception, when other arguably less popular sports get hours of coverage. I know the cost of televising cross country is high but what we get still seem disproportionate to me.
Any thoughts?