So much has been written about the difficulties Wolff has and might endure, breaking out in what is still very much a man’s world, that a sexist narrative almost seems to be being propagated. And yet the sportswoman herself has rarely complained about discrimination. “I’m a great believer that if you put yourself out there you’ve got to be able to take the good and the bad,” she says. “It’s my choice to do what I do. And I’m open to the fact that not everybody is going to be for me.” She wasn’t always this sanguine, she concedes. “There was a moment in my career where I didn’t know whether to use my femininity or try to show that I was hard and tough. But my husband helped me a lot. He said: 'You are a woman and you should be proud of being a woman. If you feel weak in a situation, don’t be scared to show that.’”