"All sports for all people"
About this Quote
"All sports for all people" is the kind of clean, democratic slogan that sounds inevitable only after someone fights to make it so. Coming from Pierre de Coubertin, the revivalist of the modern Olympics, it carries the moral heft of a political program disguised as leisure. The phrasing is bluntly universal: not some sports, not elite sports, not sports for the already-strong. All of it, for everyone. That totalizing reach is the point. Coubertin is selling sport as a civic technology, a way to manufacture citizens through disciplined bodies, rules, and shared rituals.
The subtext is less kumbaya than it appears. For a late-19th/early-20th-century European leader, sport was tied to nation-building, social order, and competition between states. "For all people" signals mass participation, but also mass shaping: schools, clubs, federations. It imagines a society where play is organized, supervised, and optimized, turning physical activity into a pipeline for character, productivity, even readiness. Inclusivity here isn t just compassion; it s strategy.
Context sharpens the irony. The Olympic project marketed itself as internationalist and peace-leaning, yet it grew in an era of imperial confidence, rigid class structures, and gender exclusion. Coubertin s universalism is aspirational, but also selective in practice. That tension is why the line works: it sounds like a promise, reads like a policy, and reveals how easily the language of access can double as the language of control.
The subtext is less kumbaya than it appears. For a late-19th/early-20th-century European leader, sport was tied to nation-building, social order, and competition between states. "For all people" signals mass participation, but also mass shaping: schools, clubs, federations. It imagines a society where play is organized, supervised, and optimized, turning physical activity into a pipeline for character, productivity, even readiness. Inclusivity here isn t just compassion; it s strategy.
Context sharpens the irony. The Olympic project marketed itself as internationalist and peace-leaning, yet it grew in an era of imperial confidence, rigid class structures, and gender exclusion. Coubertin s universalism is aspirational, but also selective in practice. That tension is why the line works: it sounds like a promise, reads like a policy, and reveals how easily the language of access can double as the language of control.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sports |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: So, You Want to Work in Sports? (Joanne Mattern, 2014) modern compilationISBN: 9781442495135 · ID: _HITOqM1UnYC
Evidence: ... All sports for all people . Pierre de Coubertin " 9781582704487TEXT.indd 125 7/30/24 4:58 PM. Other candidates (1) Lettre à Messieurs les membres du C.I.O. (Pierre de Coubertin, 1919)50.0% Off-print, [Lausanne, January,1919].. The short slogan “All sports for all people” appears to be an English paraphras... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Coubertin, Pierre de. (2026, February 7). All sports for all people. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-sports-for-all-people-163583/
Chicago Style
Coubertin, Pierre de. "All sports for all people." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-sports-for-all-people-163583/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All sports for all people." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-sports-for-all-people-163583/. Accessed 19 Feb. 2026.
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