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United Kingdom first to recognise parkour as official sport

In Sport
March 28, 2025

The United Kingdom has become the first country to officially recognise parkour as a sport.

The practice, also known as freerunning, has had its application to be recognised approved by the home country sports councils.

Governing body Parkour UK says participants can “take part whenever and wherever they want”.

Minister for Sport Tracey Crouch described it as a “fun, creative and innovative option”.

“I want people to get out there and find the sport and physical activity that appeals to them,” she added.

“I am pleased that it has been recognised as a sport, giving it the platform for further growth in this country.

“The sport promotes movement and using the great outdoors as a space to get active in and I encourage people to don their trainers and give it a go.”

the discipline was founded in France in the 1980s by a group of nine men and named l’art du deplacement.

The governing body describes it as a physical discipline in which participants “move freely over and through any terrain using only the abilities of the body”.

Parkour UK says it “encourages self-improvement on all levels, revealing one’s physical and mental limits while simultaneously offering ways to overcome them”.

The term “freerunning” was introduced to communicate the sport to an English-speaking audience.

Sebastien Foucan, president of Parkour UK, is most recognisable from his role as Mollaka in the opening scene of James Bond’s Casino Royale, where he is chased through a building site by Daniel Craig.

Foucan, who has also appeared music videos for Madonna and stared on Channel 4 documentary Jump London, called the decision, external a “groundbreaking moment for a discipline which started off as child’s play and continues as child’s play – for all ages”.

“We celebrate activity and playfulness whilst constantly challenging our mental and physical limits. It is more than just jumping, it is a health driven way of life,” he added.

Parkour UK chief executive Eugene Minogue said the sport is now in a vast majority of primary and secondary schools, colleges and universities, with the UK also boasting 50 Parkour Parks.

He added: “All this in just over seven years , an amazing achievement and testament to the unique and diverse parkour/freerunning community in the UK, which is world leading.”

However, parkour has faced some criticism, external for “potentially jeopardising lives” and encouraging “trespassing”.