PARIS (AP) — When Clarisse Agbégnénou received her sixth world judo title, confirming the reigning Olympic champion as one of many athletes to observe at subsequent yr’s Paris Video games, the French star’s smallest however biggest fan was much less wild about her mom’s latest gold medal than she was about her breast milk.
After a peckish day of few feeds — as a result of mum had been busy placing opponents by means of the wringer — 10-month-old Athéna made amends that night time.
“She didn’t let my boobs out of her mouth,” Agbégnénou says. “I used to be like, ‘Wow, okay.’ I feel it was actually one thing for her.”
Breastfeeding and high-performance sports activities have been lengthy an nearly unattainable mixture for high feminine athletes, torn for many years between careers or motherhood, as a result of having each was so powerful.
However that’s turning into much less true forward of the 2024 Olympics, the place ladies will take one other step ahead of their lengthy march for equality, competing in equal numbers with males for the primary time, and with pioneering moms like Agbégnénou exhibiting that it’s potential to breastfeed and be aggressive.
They don’t faux that late-night feeds, damaged sleep, pumping milk and having to eat for 2 persons are simple. However some feminine athletes are additionally discovering that juggling their careers with the trials of motherhood can repay with highly effective emotional well-being.
Talking in an interview with The Related Press, Agbégnénou stated she surprised even herself by coming again so shortly from childbirth to win on the worlds in Might, with Athéna in tow and anticipating to be fed each few hours.

In coaching, Agbégnénou would cease for fast feeds when Athéna wanted milk, nestling her hungry child within the folds of her kimono, whereas different athletes within the judo corridor paid them no thoughts, carrying on with their bouts.
“I used to be sweating on her, poor child,” she says. “However she didn’t concentrate. She simply wished to eat.”
Girls who’ve breastfed and carried on competing say that help from coaches and sports activities directors is crucial. Agbégnénou credit the Worldwide Judo Federation for permitting her to take Athéna to competitions. IJF officers sounded out different rivals and coaches about whether or not the child was a nuisance for them and have been informed, “’No, she was actually excellent, we didn’t hear the child,’” she says.
“It’s superb,” she says of her friends’ acceptance and help. “They’re a part of my combat and I’m actually pleased with them.”
In addition to Agbégnénou, three different ladies additionally requested and have been allowed to nurse their infants at IJF World Tour competitions prior to now six years, with preparations made every time that enabled the mothers “to look after the kid and to not disturb different athletes’ preparation,” says the governing physique’s secretary normal, Lisa Allan. She says the IJF is now drawing up particular insurance policies for judokas who’re pregnant or postpartum as a result of ”increasingly more athletes are persevering with their careers while balancing having a household.”
The Paris Olympics’ chief organizer, Tony Estanguet, says they’re additionally exploring the potential for offering services for nursing athletes on the Video games.
“They need to have entry to their kids — for the well-being of the moms and the kids,” he stated in an AP interview. “The standing of athletes who’re younger moms must evolve a bit. We have to discover options to maybe make it simpler for these athletes to deliver infants” into the Olympic village the place athletes are housed.
For some breastfeeding athletes, being a pioneer is a part of the kick.

Two-time Olympic rowing champion Helen Glover, now aiming for her fourth Summer season Video games, gave delivery to twins at the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak, breastfed them after which got here out of what she’d supposed to be retirement to compete at the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Video games in 2021. Glover was the primary rower to compete for Britain on the Olympics as a mom.
Glover’s eldest, Logan, misplaced curiosity in her milk in regards to the time of his first birthday, however twins Package and Willow stored feeding to 14 months previous. She says that mixing her punishing rowing coaching with lengthy feeds for 2 infants was “very draining. It was taking each calorie I had.”
“However I might do it as a result of it was my very own time and my very own alternative,” she says.
“Everybody ought to have the selection,” Glover provides. “Our our bodies … are generally very modified by means of childbirth and being pregnant and breastfeeding. So the solutions are by no means going to be one-size-fits-all. However I feel it’s actually thrilling that these conversations are even being had.”
For some athletes, Milk Stork has additionally been a assist. The U.S.-based transporter ships working mothers’ milk once they’re separated from their infants. It says it shipped milk pumped by athletes who competed on the 2021 Paralympic Video games in Tokyo and in addition transported 21 gallons (80 liters) of milk from coaches, trainers and different help workers on the Olympics that yr.

The daughter of British archery athlete Naomi Folkard was simply 5 1/2-months previous and breastfeeding completely when her mom traveled to Tokyo for her fifth and last Olympic Video games.
Nursing moms efficiently pushed to have the ability to take infants to these Olympics, held with social distancing and with out full crowds due to the coronavirus pandemic. Relatively than put her daughter, Emily, by means of the ordeal of getting to stay other than her, in a Tokyo resort outdoors of the athletes’ village, Folkard reluctantly left her behind with a big inventory of frozen milk. She constructed that up over months, pumping into the night time so Emily wouldn’t go hungry whereas she was in Japan.
However that created one other drawback: As a result of Folkard’s breasts had change into so good at making milk, she needed to pump frequently on the Video games to cease them from turning into painfully swollen. She threw that milk away.
“I used to be having to stand up within the night time and pump simply because my provide was a lot,” she says. “It wasn’t nice for efficiency preparation actually. However I did what I needed to do to be there.”
And with every drop, progress.
“There’s nonetheless an extended approach to go, however persons are speaking about it now. Girls aren’t retiring to have kids. They’re nonetheless competing,” Folkard says.
“I really feel like issues are altering.”
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