Sport makes you old.

This claim may contradict all scientific findings.

It takes less than 0.5 seconds for the Internet to offer almost 18 million pieces of evidence to prove otherwise.

But even in this case, the result of a field test cannot be dismissed out of hand: What do you see when you look at the designers of sport in this country?

Very, very many old faces of worn out, tired men.

No, at this point it is not about egocentric power fighters of large associations, but about the "amateurs" who, after a life in a sports home, are desperately looking for young people for their voluntary work.

No wonder that young people turn away with thanks as soon as they check what their love of sport has led to over the decades: to a 40-hour job, if it still gets there, unpaid and often subsidized out of their own pocket a great restriction of private life, constant moaning and at the end of an era a warm, damp handshake.

To change that, sports policy doesn't have to run to the fountain of youth.

For the time being, it was enough to stop the bureaucratization and upgrade the honorary office both materially and ideally.