The Borneo Post

Bach wants only winners in Games host battle

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LAUSANNE: Olympic leader Thomas Bach does not like losers and that is why Paris and Los Angeles could this year both win the right to host the world’s biggest and most complicate­d sporting event.

The French and US mega cities are currently locked in battle to stage the 2024 Olympics, along with outsider Budapest.

There is mounting speculatio­n however that an Internatio­nal Olympic Committee meeting in September could give one of the frontrunne­rs the 2024 Games and at the same time award 2028 to the other. The double gold medal event could take some twiddling of the Olympic machinery, but Bach said in December: “We have to take into considerat­ion that the procedure as it is now produces too many losers.”

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is worried that if Paris or Los Angeles miss out on 2024, they may give up on hosting at all. And in times of economic uncertaint­y, the IOC cannot afford to lose such quality candidates.

“You can be happy about a strong field in quantity for one day but you start to regret it the next day because then the procedure starts to produce losers and it is not the purpose of an Olympic candidatur­e procedure to produce losers,” Bach said to support his call for change.

The IOC is refusing to say whether reform will be ready for the September 13 vote in Lima. “We are staying with the 2024 process, we are very clear about that,” Christophe Dubi, the IOC executive director for the Olympics, told AFP.

Paris and Los Angeles have both said they are only interested in 2024. However Casey Wasserman, chairman of the Los Angeles 2024 bid committee, said last month that the idea of awarding two Games at the same time was “an interestin­g concept”.

Sources close to the IOC says a double vote has many advantages.

If Paris loses again after being beaten for 1992 ( by Barcelona), 2008 ( Beijing) and 2012 ( London) it would almost certainly withdraw humiliated and not take part again.

Los Angeles, with its heavyweigh­t US media backers, would almost certainly take the same view.

“I know that the idea of a double vote is on the table,” one source close to the IOC told AFP. “There is a clear procedure for 2024, that for 2028 is not yet set,” added the source, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the confidenti­ality of discussion­s.

“The candidates will have to show that they agree this double campaign. If they say no it will be difficult to impose it on them.”

I f Paris, Los Angeles and Budapest agree to the vote change then the IOC will need the back of the Associatio­n of National Olympic Committees ( ANOC) and to talk to countries that have expressed an interest in 2028. Madrid has already said it could be a candidate.

An IOC executive meeting in July could formally propose the move. Then the Olympic charter will also need to be changed, another source close to the Olympic movement said.

“It’s quite clever of Bach,” said Patrick Nally, a sports marketing specialist who was one of the creators of the IOC’s The Olympic Partner ( TOP) sponsorshi­p programme.

“Bach is aware the IOC is facing difficulti­es,” he added. “One of the biggest concerns is what happens if LA doesn’t win.”

The IOC cannot afford to alienate the United States which was “the saviour of the Olympic movement” when it risked financial troubles in the 1980s. Los Angeles held a landmark Games in 1984, NBC stepped in with a major television deal and Coca Cola was a huge sponsor.

Nally said “Paris is a great city, Paris lost a few times before, but it s not commercial­ly so important for the structure of IOC.”

Bach “cannot afford to risk upsetting and destroying the one market IOC is totally dependent on.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Thomas Bach
Thomas Bach

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