Edmonton Journal

Brisbane edges closer to landing '32 Games

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While debate has raged over whether the Tokyo Olympics should go ahead this year, the Australian city of Brisbane has been moving closer to securing the hosting rights for the 2032 Summer Games — a deal that could be sealed as early as July.

Influentia­l Australian Olympic chief John Coates said on the weekend that the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee was completing due diligence on the bid before it was presented to the body's Executive Board.

“The reality is this: For Brisbane and Queensland, the bell for the last lap has rung, we have final hurdles to clear before the tape is breasted,” Coates told the Australian Olympic Committee's Annual General Meeting Saturday.

Brisbane has been the beneficiar­y of new IOC rules on bidding for the Olympics aimed at reducing the once astronomic­al cost of the process for aspirant cities.

After it was identified as a “preferred candidate” in February, the stakeholde­rs in the bid, which will encompass the southeaste­rn region of the state of Queensland, entered “targeted dialogue” with the IOC.

“The IOC has parked the other cities,” Coates said after the AGM. “If we fell over, they would have an opportunit­y again.”

Last month's commitment from the Australian government to split the infrastruc­ture costs 50-50 with local government allowed Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk to forward the necessary financial guarantees to the IOC.

After the due diligence phase, the next step toward Brisbane joining Melbourne (1956) and Sydney (2000) as Australia's Olympic host cities will be a vote of the Executive Board, which next meets on Wednesday and again on June 8.

A key figure in the successful bid for the Sydney Games, Coates's first attempt to bring the sporting spectacula­r to Australia was as part of Brisbane's 1992 bid, which was one of five that lost out to Barcelona.

As a seasoned bid campaigner, Coates was cautious about prediction­s that Brisbane could be declared hosts on July 20 at the IOC session in Tokyo ahead of the delayed 2020 Olympics.

“I won't speculate on that,” he said.

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