Sports

Pink offers to pay bikini bottoms fine for Norwegian beach handball team

U.S. pop singer Pink has offered to pay a fine handed out to the Norwegian female beach handball team for wearing shorts instead of the required bikini bottoms at the European Beach Handball Championships in Bulgaria last week.

Norway's female team fined at European Beach Handball Championships for 'breach of clothing regulations'

Pop singer Pink, seen here performing in New Zealand in 2018, offered to pay the $1,770 US fine given to the Norwegian beach handball team for wearing shorts instead of bikini bottoms. Pink expressed her support for the team on Twitter Saturday. (Dianne Manson/Getty Images)

U.S. pop singer Pink has offered to pay a fine given to the Norwegian female beach handball team for wearing shorts instead of the required bikini bottoms.

On social media Saturday, Pink said she was "very proud" of the team for protesting the rule that prevented them from wearing shorts like their male counterparts.

At the European Beach Handball Championships in Bulgaria last week, Norway's female team was fined 1,500 euros ($1,770 US) for what the European federation called improper clothing and "a breach of clothing regulations." The rules stipulate that women must wear bikini bottoms while men wear shorts.

The Norwegian Handball Federation didn't contest the decision, seen by the Norwegian team and several others as unfair, and announced earlier that it was ready to pay the fine.

A team of athletic women wearing sports-style bikini tops and shorts
Norway's beach handball federation was fined after its team wore shorts instead of bikini bottoms in the bronze medal match of the European Handball Championships in Varna, Bulgaria. (Norwegian Handball Federation)

Handball body donates amount of fine

The European Handball Federation (EHF) on Monday acknowledged the commotion that the incident had triggered in media outlets and social media.

It said it would donate the amount paid by the Norwegian team "to a major international sports foundation which supports equality for women and girls in sports." 

"We are very much aware of the attention the topic has received over the past days, and while changes cannot happen overnight, we are fully committed that something good comes out of this situation right now, which is why the EHF has donated the fine for a good cause promoting equality in sports," EHF president Michael Wiederer said in a statement. 

He said that handball is already ahead of other sports in some respects, such as the parity given to the men's and women's competitions. He noted that this had happened far sooner in beach handball than in soccer. 

The Norwegian women posted a photograph of themselves on Instagram wearing shorts and told their followers: "Thank you so much for all the support. We really appreciate all the love we have received."

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.