Laura Muir waives proper to anonymity over coach banned for severe misconduct; Andy Younger, who coached Muir till 2023, has been banned from athletics for 3 years; Muir gained silver within the 1500m on the Tokyo Olympic Video games
By Geraint Hughes
Final Up to date: 30/09/25 2:16pm
Nice Britain’s Laura Muir has waived her proper to anonymity after her former coach was banned for severe misconduct
Olympic 1500m silver medallist Laura Muir has waived her proper to anonymity relating to a case involving a former coach who has been banned for 3 years for severe misconduct.
Andy Younger, a former coach of Muir, has been banned from athletics for 3 years after being discovered responsible of significant misconduct.
UK Athletics (UKA) introduced {that a} disciplinary panel had discovered Younger – who was Muir’s coach when she gained Olympic 1500 metres silver in Tokyo in 2021 – responsible of 9 fees out of 39 he had confronted, seven of them severe.
The panel’s written determination of October 2024 was appealed, with an enchantment panel confirming the unique panel’s findings in full in August however various the preliminary sanction from 5 years to a few years, backdated to April 2023.
Muir was coached by Younger for 12 years earlier than they cut up in 2023 with Muir leaving a coaching camp in South Africa as a consequence of disagreements between the pair and different athletes within the group.
Seven of unique 39 fees have been severe
In September 2024, UKA thought-about 39 fees in opposition to Younger and located 9 confirmed with seven of them severe.
That UKA Panel concluded that Younger had, on a number of events, positioned efficiency above athlete welfare, ignored medical recommendation, and used manipulative and coercive behaviour in direction of these he coached. In its ruling, the Panel described his actions as “conduct exerted pressure sufficient to vitiate the Athletes’ free will”.
Examples included requiring an athlete to compete in opposition to the clear recommendation of a physiotherapist, threatening to exclude athletes from coaching or races if they didn’t comply along with his calls for, and emotionally undermining those that raised issues about accidents.
One other cost highlighted an incident wherein Younger, following a disagreement, drove at velocity with an athlete in his automobile earlier than abandoning them on the roadside, disregarding their security and wellbeing.
The UKA Panel suspended Younger’s teaching licence for 5 years (backdated to 2023), concluding he “placed the welfare and safety of the athlete above the development of performance”.
Attraction noticed preliminary sanctions lowered
Younger appealed this determination and in August this 12 months an Unbiased Attraction Panel concluded a barely lesser view of the gravity of the misconduct total, however rejected claims of bias, authorized error and unfairness. It confirmed the misconduct findings in full, agreeing with the UKA Panel that seven of the breaches have been severe.
The Unbiased Appeals Panel lowered Younger’s suspension from 5 years to a few (nonetheless backdated to 2023) and he must endure ‘particular rehabilitative coaching’ earlier than any return to teaching is taken into account.
Muir cut up with coach Andy Younger in 2023
Muir supportive of choices and targeted on future
Following the conclusion of the Panels findings, Muir mentioned: “I have chosen to waive my anonymity and confirm my involvement in this case. I fully support the decisions reached by both independent panels and I am grateful that the process has been followed through so thoroughly.
“I wish to thank those that got here ahead and people who contributed to the method – it has not been straightforward, but it surely was essential.
“Athletics has always been my passion, and I am pleased to say that I have rediscovered the love of my sport and the enjoyment of training and working within a supportive and positive coaching environment. I am now focused on the future, looking forward to the next few years of my career, and putting this difficult chapter firmly behind me.”
‘No stage of success can justify behaviours’
Jack Buckner, the Chief Govt of UKA, added; “This has been a difficult and sobering case for everyone involved in athletics.
“There isn’t a stage of success on the monitor which might ever justify behaviours that fall so in need of the requirements required of a UKA licensed coach. This case underlines that efficiency and medals can by no means come on the expense of athlete welfare.
“Significant culture change has already taken place within UKA. The emphasis on welfare and respect has been further driven from the leadership of Paula Dunn and the performance team. We have strengthened reporting systems, expanded welfare support, and ensured independent expertise and support is available when concerns are raised.
“We’re grateful to the athletes who confirmed braveness in coming ahead – their actions have ensured that unacceptable conduct has been uncovered and addressed.
“Looking ahead, we are determined to continue building on this progress. We are in active dialogue with coaches and have launched a new coaching group, making clear that we want to support and celebrate the very best coaches – those who achieve success in the right way, with athlete welfare at the centre of their practice. That is how our sport will thrive in the future.”