Just give Calgary the 2030 Games, Henderson says
Two-time Olympian and former International Olympic Committee member Paul Henderson would like to see the IOC follow its own lead when it comes to the selection of host cities for the Games.
The IOC recently broke from tradition by transforming the bid process for the Summer Games by declaring two hosts — Paris in 2024 and Los Ange- les in 2028 — at the same time. Speaking on the heels of a plebiscite that essentially scuttled Calgary’s bid plans for 2026, Henderson would like to see winter host announcements handled in a similar fashion.
“I believe what they should do now is give the Winter Games for 2026 to a winter city in Europe and tell Calgary ‘You’re going to get the 2030 Games with no bid,’ ” Henderson said.
Stockholm and a joint Italian bid from Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo remain in the mix for 2026. The IOC will accept bids in January and the election of the host city is set for June.
Henderson, 83, has been an Olympic regular over his long sporting career. The Toronto native first competed at the Games in 1964 at Tokyo, was an IOC member from 2000-04, served as a longtime technical delegate for sailing and has held several international board po- sitions and federation executive roles.
Henderson said the 1988 Calgary Games were “terrific,” thanks in part to the great leadership in place at the time. The venues from the ’88 Games formed the foundation of a 2026 bid, but 56.4 per cent of Calgarians cast a dissenting vote in a non-binding plebiscite Tuesday.
“As a Canadian, it’s a huge opportunity that’s been missed,” said Own The Podium chief executive officer Anne Merklinger.
A cost-sharing agreement between the three levels of government wasn’t clear until late October, hampering Calgary 2026 efforts. Three other cities withdrew from the 2026 race earlier this year — Sapporo, Japan; Sion, Switzerland and Graz, Austria — and Turkey’s Erzurum was eliminated last month by the IOC.