Joe & Caroline Fuggle, from The Athlete Place
*Disclaimer: This content contains sensitive information that some may find upsetting.
We, the founders of The Athlete Place, share our experience of safeguarding issues to support other athletes who may be facing similar issues. We also aim to raise awareness and educate those who have never faced these challenges.
Here, Caroline, Joe's mum, gives her account of their real-life safeguarding and welfare experience and describes the implications and impacts that followed.
Rewind the clock to a sunny day in October 2016. I’d taken Joe to a university open day, a year earlier than is normal, in an attempt to create some sort of urgency to knuckle down with A-levels! Walking around the HIPAC (high-performance athletics centre) and gym, he was inspired by the amazing facilities on offer.
Ranked No.1 in the UK at that time (for U17 400m hurdles), the university was keen to have him. Like most top applicants to Loughborough University, Joe was headhunted to join one of the leading groups.
But as we were leaving, he got chatting with one of the athletes acting as a tour guide, and his contact details were passed on to the coach of an elite training group that would be perfect for his needs.
The visit had the desired effect; this was where he wanted to go, and the hard work needed would be worth it. Job done!!
During the drive home, the coach messaged him to say Joe would be more than welcome to join the group. Things were starting to look up. Receiving occasional messages from him seemed almost an honour… his group included GB Athletes, for heaven’s sake.
But what I didn’t realise until much later, was that these messages were not occasional, but almost daily conversations, and were not just about training topics but “How's school?” etc… Remember, at this time, Joe was still only 16, a schoolboy.
Joe, during his 3rd year of university, 2021
Looking back and knowing what we know now, we believe this was grooming. As a mum, I now feel ridiculously foolish and naïve not to have questioned this. But you don’t. You just don’t. You trust that the coach has your kid’s best interest at heart. Why wouldn’t you? Not to mention the fact that Joe was over the moon to feel wanted by a top coach.
A few months before he was due to start university, the coach set a training schedule to get started at home. He even came to our house to meet me and go over some of the exercises with Joe. Looking back, this could easily have been all part of the trust-building plan. I guess we will never know.
September arrived and it was time to leave home for this new life. He was excited to finally start university and see where this elite training set-up could take him. The training itself was a significant step up from what he was used to, but the coach seemed super supportive.
But, looking back, it now feels like control was being exerted over every aspect of life, both on and off the track, under the guise of ‘if you want the results, it’s my way or no way’ … but in all honesty, this control now seems to have a deeper meaning.
Joe competed for Loughborough University at the British University Championships in 2018, finishing 2nd.
After a day-time party at a local pub that Joe and his friends attended after training, a photo appeared on Instagram of him holding a bottle of fruit cider (to put this in context: he had one cider and was then home and in bed by 10… not exactly an alcoholic rave!).
One cider would, I’d say, be well below the expected standard for any first-year student, even those who were athletes.
A few weeks later, at a 1:1 post-season feedback session, the coach told him, and I paraphrase, “I stopped coaching you when I saw that photo. You were no longer worth my time” … Being made to feel guilty by his coach for going out and having fun with his mates was surely overstepping the mark and not right, on any level.
Yes, late nights and alcohol consumption aren’t ideal for any high-performance athlete, but we were sure this wasn’t about that. It was about a coach losing the ability to control an athlete. What we hadn’t known was that this coach had a history of creating and then prioritising ‘favourites’, and Joe had been his new project.
The innocuous cider incident, we think, could have been a realisation that Joe wasn’t going to be the easy-to-manipulate pushover he’d hoped for.
It wasn’t long before a new ‘favourite’ appeared… yet another school-aged boy hoping to attend the university. This athlete, Ben, lived relatively locally and was soon invited to join the group as a 17-year-old - still at school.
At this point, and in our eyes, the coach immediately lost interest in Joe and many others as athletes, projecting his total attention towards the new athlete. This rejection, along with several other scenarios, understandably caused Joe difficulties that were showcased both on and off the track, eventually becoming too much, with him quitting the sport.
It was a sad end to a career that had such great prospects.
Joe (middle) winning the Schools International, 2015
Meanwhile, manipulation of the new ‘favourite’ (and his family) began. Becoming liked by the family was an integral part of the deception. Being trusted by the parents meant no one would ever suspect anything untoward. It all felt so familiar to me, now an observer. Invitations to family barbeques and birthday parties became the norm; performances were improving. Life was great for Ben and his family, at least.
There still was nothing that leapt out as obviously wrong/inappropriate until one weekend in June 2021…
On the Sunday morning of the British Championships weekend that doubled that year as the final opportunity for Tokyo Olympics team selection, I woke to find multiple missed calls and messages saying, “Mum, where are you? Mum? Mum? Pick up my calls”.
I assumed these were to tell me about a results revelation, as Joe’s old training group contained no less than four Olympic hopefuls. Nothing could have prepared me for the manic call that followed.
He was crying hysterically and could barely speak, and it took a while before I could work out what he was telling me.
In short, he’d just found out that Ben had caught the coach filming him having a shower in the hotel room they were sharing during a two-day competition the weekend before.
Imagine seeing a phone camera held against the glass panel above the bathroom door, knowing who was holding it and the shocking realisation of why.
After confronting the coach, who immediately admitted guilt and fled, Ben, aged just 20, was left to pick up the pieces, call the police, and wait for his mum to race to Bedford to retrieve her traumatised son.
Both then tried to process the fact that the man they had trusted implicitly and had welcomed into their home had betrayed them in one of the most nauseating ways possible.
The next day, Ben won a bronze medal at the England Athletics U23 Championships… a perfect example of his mental strength and personality. He then went on to represent GB… He is a legend.
Joe, weeks before he decided to leave athletics in December 2019
Ben had kept the news from the training group, who were already having to deal with being left coach-less and with no explanation as to why, the week before the most crucial competition of their careers. Their compassionate assumption was that maybe a close family member had died, and he’d had to leave urgently.
On hearing the actual reason, all hell was let loose within the group. Emotions were extreme, and there was no desire to hide the intense pent-up anger that most of them felt. Some successfully used that anger on the track, whilst others took it out on anything that could legally be punched. What was playing out was so sad to see.
They’d all been betrayed. Just one of the four hopefuls made it to the Tokyo Olympics that summer…
For Ben, Joe, and the entire training group, the coach's lifetime coaching ban and placement on the sex offenders register will never make up for the trust issues and feelings of betrayal left behind. Were chances for Olympic selection missed as a result? We will never know…
Joe has since revealed, following almost one year of therapy, that this coach was the cause for his burnout, subsequent mental health challenges and confidence issues that have had a widespread impact on his life.
As parents, Cheryl (Ben’s mum) and I felt betrayed. We had trusted that coach to do what was best for our sons. But looking back, we both agree there were many ‘red flags’ that neither of us felt able to question at the time:
On one warm-weather training camp in Tenerife, the coach shared a room with Ben and another male athlete to ‘keep his costs down’. But how could we raise concerns about that when, as an unpaid volunteer coach, he had to fund his own trip to coach our kids?
The offers for Ben (whilst still school-age) to stay overnight at his house after training group social evenings or to reduce the distance to drive on weekends.
The frequency that body composition measurements were carried out on training group members in their rooms, with doors shut…
And perhaps the worst of all, the requests for topless photos of the athletes as ‘updates’ to check in on their nutrition and recovery…
Joe and Katarina Johnson-Thompson, 3x World Champion
All of these scenarios are now viewed with very deep mistrust and suspicion, and I personally will always feel guilty for not being brave enough to question and speak out about them.
Feeling indebted to a coach or being worried your athlete will lose their place in a training group are not reasons to keep quiet about concerns…. We learnt that the hard way.
We hope that by telling our story, other parents will become more vigilant and be more prepared to speak out or, at the very least, question behaviours they feel are perhaps inappropriate.
Safeguarding issues within sports must stop… talking about them to raise awareness is the first step.
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