A very, very warm welcome to our 100th episode. Woo!
A milestone for us having started the podcast just under 4 years ago.
I truly hope you have enjoyed all the episodes. If you’ve listened to them all then kudos and thanks for being with us along the way. If you’re new in, then hello and I kind of envy you as there is a back catalogue just waiting for you to tune into. When I look back now only a few sections of the conversations are specific to time, and so the discussions are pretty evergreen.
It’s been a pure joy to connect with so many great minds, thinkers, achievers, aspirers, supporters of others - I’m truly humbled and want to thank everyone who has been on the show. I want to say at this point a huge thank you to Rachel who caringly curates the podcast episodes, Rachel does this with a coach's eye for not only the dialogue but also for the deeper motivations, passions, concerns and insights that people share in the conversations.
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This week's guest is Baroness Dame Sue Campbell.
Sue Campbell trained as a PE teacher, guiding inner city children in Moss side to embrace sport.
From humble yet so powerfully formative beginnings Sue has become one of the most effective and infectious leaders in modern sport. Sue founded the National Coaching Foundation, the Youth Sport Trust and became Chair of UK Sport from its early beginnings to becoming a world superpower. Sue now leads the English women's FA, in pursuit of growing the game.
Her achievements are profound and pioneering having led the development of support for coaches, children, whole system wide sports. Recognition for her work includes 11 honorary degrees, appointed Baroness Campbell of Loughborough and Dame Commander in 2020.
Throughout her career Sue has infused teams, organisations and the people within them to become better, lift the standards all in service of celebrating the power of sport to affect lives, show us that things are possible and to do so with deep respect for each other.
Notes
The importance of sport, for us and specifically children
Football and its ability to reach parts of society that traditional legislation can’t
The next challenge
Designing a pathway for girls professional football. Creating the best professional league for women in the world
Long termism
Influencing
Sue’s greatest challenges
Growing Women’s Football in its own light
Links
Steve Ingham on Twitter www.twitter.com/ingham_steve
Supporting Champions on;
Twitter www.twitter.com/support_champs
Linkedin, www.linkedin.com/company/supporting-champions
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/supportingchampions
121: Brendan Cropley and Zoe Knowles on Reflective Practice
120: Sian Allen on wearable technology
119: Jean Gomes leading self and others
118: Mark Burnley on training zones
117: Costas Karageorghis on music and performance
116: Kate Hays on the psychology of the Lionesses
115: Joe Baker on the tyranny of talent
114: Christian Swann on using goals effectively
113: Nick Tiller on harnessing scepticism
112: Lucy Gossage on triathlon, training and supporting cancer patients
111: Andy McNab on special forces performance
110: Ryan King on operating in complexity
109: Tom Geraghty on psychological safety
108: Jenny Coe and Amy Whitehead on myths of sports coaching
107: Colin Lewin on the evolution of the support team in football
106: Abbie Eaton on women’s motor racing, injury and pushing boundaries
105: David Joyce on decision making
104: David Dunne on behaviour change and technology
103: Danny Kerry on performance leadership
102: Vanessa Bohns on influence
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