Jess Ennis-Hill’s former coach blasts UK Sport and UK Athletics over funding snub

Jessica Ennis-Hill’s former coach Toni Minichiello has blasted UK Sport and UK Athletics after he was declared ineligible for public funding earlier this week.

Minichiello was given a life ban from athletics in August 2022 after an investigation found he engaged in “sexually physical behaviour” with athletes.

UK Sport, which funds Olympic and Paralympic athletes, support staff and governing bodies, announced on Monday that an appeal panel had declared Minichiello ineligible to receive public funding.

Minichiello, who was Ennis-Hill’s coach when she won Olympic heptathlon gold at London 2012, said in a statement issued to the PA news agency: “I have been the victim of a deeply flawed process and a system that is not fit for purpose for nearly three years.

“The public would be shocked to learn that UK Sport chooses to rely on a disciplinary process run by UK Athletics that ran down my coaching licence, while it was suspended for over 400 days, knowing that it would deny me an appeal. How can this be fair and reasonable?

“Further that UK Athletics directed the investigation to not call any of the 80 witnesses put to them that were supportive of me.

“I shall be raising the many issues that have emerged with my MP. A publicly-funded system with no clear accountability is simply not fit for purpose.”

UK Sport’s initial decision on funding, which came after the August 2022 ban was imposed by an independent case management group, was the subject of an appeal by Minichiello before the appeal panel ruling was made public on Monday.

UK Sport said Minichiello would remain ineligible until it is satisfied he has been granted a coach licence or appointed to a role which potentially qualifies him to public funding or publicly-funded benefits by either UK Athletics or another national sports governing body.

Ennis-Hill said in August 2022 that the findings against her former coach were “shocking and upsetting” but said she had never been on the receiving end of any inappropriate treatment.

Minichiello coached Ennis-Hill when she won gold at London 2012

Minichiello had denied the charges against him, but UK Athletics said at the time that the findings, which amounted to a large number of breaches of its coach licence terms over a 15-year period, constituted “gross breaches of trust”.

Minichiello’s coaching licence expired during that original disciplinary process, but UK Athletics said there would never be a time in the future where it would be appropriate to issue a new licence.

PA

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