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Montreal

Former artistic swimming athletes seek damages for alleged abuse by national team coaches

Five women who used to be part of the national artistic swimming team cite stories of harassment, body shaming, and dismissal of injuries and concussions. They are demanding damages.

Women cite stories of harassment, body shaming, and dismissal of injuries and concussions

Canada's artistic swimming team won gold at the 2019 Pan American Games in Peru. In 2020, allegations surfaced of abuse and now five women have come forward to request a class action lawsuit against the sport federation. (Moises Castillo/The Associated Press)

Five women who used to be part of the national artistic swimming team have come forward to denounce abuse they say they suffered at the hands of coaching staff, and to demand damages from the sport federation.

The former artistic swimming athletes (the sport was formerly called synchronized swimming)filed a request for a class action lawsuit against CanadaArtistic Swimming(CAS),asking to sue for collective damages over psychological abuse and harassmentsuffered while training.

The lawsuit would cover athletes who were training and competing between 2010 and 2020, and seeks compensation of $250,000 forpunitive damages, as well as moral damages in the amount of $12,000 per athlete for each year they spent on the team.

Erin Willson, who trained with the team from 2007 to 2013, said she was regularly the victim of public body shaming by the head coach at the time, Julie Sauv.

Willson,who is five foot eight and weighed at the time between 130 and 135 pounds was reprimanded by her coach for being overweight and received multiple written warnings for breaking her weight contract with the federation.

"The moment that was the most shocking to me was the first time Iever heardanyone comment on my body in this way.[Sauv]told me that my boobs were too big for synchro.Iwould also get comments on my legs being too big, and overall that I was too big as a person," said Willson.

Erin Willson said she was targeted and harassed about her weight by her coach while training with the national team. (Radio-Canada)

After being benched due to her weight, Willson says she was pitted against a fellow alternate, after the women were told that whoever could lose more weight over the summer would be rewarded by regaining their team spot.

"At that point, Ididn't feel Ihad any other choice than to stop eating," she said.

Willson said the repeated harassment about her body led her to develop a serious eating disorder. She was also diagnosed with anxiety, depression and PTSD.

"At that point I had been reduced down to nothing but a number on the scale. My passion, my work ethic, my athleticism, none of it mattered."

Struggling with mental health and close to a breakdown, Willson said she felt trapped and unable to quit due to a contract locking her in for another year. If she left early, she was told she'd have to pay the federation $50,000.

Willson eventually was able to drop out of her training by taking a medical leave and seeking treatment for her eating disorder.

Now a PhD student who studies abuse in sport, Willson said she still feels the aftermath of her treatment at the hands ofSauv, who died in April 2020.

"I don't think I'm ever going to be confident with my body or happy with how it looks," she said. "My body image will never be the same."

Several women stated that former coach Julie Sauve was 'obsessed' with policing athletes body weight. (Dave Chidley/Canadian Press)

Quebec athlete ChloIsaac also trained under Sauv. She said her coach would often comment on her body as being "too muscular," which she felt was ironic considering she was training for the Olympics.

Isaac claims she and other teammates were often "humiliated"and insulted in front of peers andstaff.

"It's really a taboo in artistic swimming," she said, adding that during her training she was both anorexic and bulimic.

Isaac said the swimmers lived in fear of regular weigh-ins, knowing that being over the goal by "a few grams" could be career-ending.

"We were normally weighed on Monday mornings, so on Sunday nights, no one ate much," Isaac told Radio-Canada.

When she consulted the team doctor about her eating disorder, she was told to take anti-depressants.

The swimmerssaid they voiced their concerns about Sauvdirectly to Canada Artistic Swimming shortly before the 2012 Olympic Games, asking for her to be removed or supervised during training.

Concerned parents, including those ofIsaac and Willson, also contacted the organization about the treatment of athletes.

Issues didn't end withSauv

Gabriella Brisson, anotherplaintiff, trained underSauv's two successors,Meng Chen andLeslie Sproule. She said Chen wouldn't give the athletes enough time to master risky manoeuvres and many of the women were injured as a result.

Gabriella Brisson said her coaches put performance over health and safety of athletes. (Radio-Canada)

In May2017, athletes demanded a meeting with the federation's chief sport officer, Julie Healy. Brisson alleges that when they tried to voice concerns, Chen started screaming at the women and had to be forcibly removed from the room twice.

After that, Chen remained on as head coach until athletes decided to send a message to management.

"We decided that we wouldn't go back to training while Mengwas poolside because we weren't comfortable," said Brisson.

After that, Leslie Sproule took over as coach. Brissonsuffered aconcussion in the week before the team left for the2017 FINAworld championships in Hungary. She says Sproulepressured her to keep training and compete anyway.

"Leslie blatantly disregarded medical advice and actively exerted pressure on me to do far more than what was safe," said Brisson, who retired from the sport in 2018.

In November 2018, the CAS hired a new coach, Gabor Szauder. In 2020, a number of allegations were made againstSzauder, claiming that he made sexist, racist and inappropriate comments and that he was verbally abusive.

Sion Ormond, another plaintiff who retired in 2020, trained under both Sproule andSzauder.

She said under Sproule's leadership, athletes were getting injured frequently.

"Never in my 13 years of artistic swimming had I seen so many injuries and concussion scares within one team. We once finished practice with five out of 10 athletes left in the water," she said.

She said her team wrote a letter to CAS outlining complaints about Sproule. Ormond said the response they received implied they were not resilient enough and perhaps not cut out to be Olympians.

Once Szauderarrived, Ormond said he becamenotorious for berating team members.

Head coach Gbor Szauder has been the subject of allegations dating back to spring 2020. (Radio-Canada)

"His bullying was so aggressive and happened so frequentlythat my teammates and I made up a secret code word to support whoever Gabor was targeting that day," she said. "Not a lot of practices went by without someone breaking into tears."

OrmondsaidSzauder made inappropriate sexual comments to her which made her uncomfortable, but which she was afraid to share with her parents.

Ultimately, the environment became so unbearable for Ormond that she chose to abandon her Olympic dream rather than continue to train underSzauder.

When she reached out directly to Healy upon her retirement at the age of 21, and detailed the incidents she had witnessed,she felt that her reaction "lacked surprise, sympathy or concern."

Despite the allegations,Szauderis still the head coach of the team, which trains in Montreal.

CAS responds

In a statement released following the class action announcement Tuesday morning, Canada Artistic Swimming CEOJackie Buckingham saidthe federation"commends the courage it took the former national team athletes to speak out at today's press conference, and we are deeply saddened by the suffering they reported."

She saidthat after allegations surfaced in 2020, CAS undertook"a comprehensive review of our national team training" as well as "an independent, third-party safe sport investigation."

The result was that "the lead investigator determined that they did not see sufficient evidence to conclude there is an unsafe training environment in the senior national team program."

However,Buckingham also saidthat "our organization recognized that there had been issues in the past and
acknowledged that although we cannot repair the painful experiences some athletes have faced in the sport in
the past, we are working very hard to improve things for the future."

Buckingham states that changes have already been put into effect, including a revamp of the coaching certification curriculum and the creation of an ombudspersonto receive athlete feedback directly.

The federation also provided "training on issues of diversity and inclusion, psychological abuse, and mental health for staff and coaches."

With files from Radio-Canada's Diane Sauv and Jacinthe Taillon