In an episode of the EHF's Handball Portraits series last year, Nze Minko pointed out that while talking about periods is still taboo and unusual, menstruation is a fact of life for most female athletes and can have a significant impact on performance and on the experience of being a sportswoman.
She opened up about the challenges of managing the menstrual cycle with performance, and experiencing an unexpected period while still a teenager playing for Nantes.
“I was 16 or 17 years old and we had a match in Brest,” Nze Minko said. “I got my period during the first half of the game. At half-time, I rush to the toilet and make a sort of menstrual pad out of toilet paper. I came back for the second half and at some point, I realise that my ‘pad’ is on the floor. I was in panic mode.”
Menstruation affects mood and performance, and there are other factors which can add to the challenges of playing a period – the French national team and several women’s club teams, including Györ, often play in white shorts, which makes worries about leaking pads or tampons extra stressful.
“I talk about menstruation quite openly, my experience with it and how I manage my daily life about it. You play in white shorts, and you get your period the morning of a match. Logically, hormones have an impact on your body and necessarily when practising sport,” Nze Minko said.
“It opens my eyes to these connections between the cycles of my body and my inner ability to live my life as an athlete.”