Daily Express

‘Relax rules and let competitor­s show emotions’

DALEY: ATHLETES NEED A FORUM TO FIGHT RACISM

- By Alex Spink ●

DALEY THOMPSON has backed the right of athletes to protest at next year’s Olympics and said he expects Games chiefs to relax their ban on such demonstrat­ions.

Stars are prohibited by Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter from taking any kind of political stand, but the decathlon legend believes the global uproar over George Floyd’s death in the US will bring about a change.

“Athletes are people, they are not automatons,” said Thompson, Olympic champion in 1980 and 1984.

“Some of them will feel strongly enough to want to take a knee, to do whatever they feel is their responsibi­lity. There should be, whether it’s on the podium or not, a forum for them to stand up and be counted if they want to.

“It’s an important cause. All lives matter. Nobody, whether you are white, black, any nationalit­y, deserves to be killed for the colour of your skin or for simple prejudice.

“I think the IOC will try to curry favour with sponsors and allow the athlete some degree of choice in the matter.”

Thompson, 61, welcomes the global move to tackle inequality but says words from the public can only achieve so much if not matched by action from government and big business.

“There are a lot of sports people trying to influence change and that’s great,” he said. “But it’s going to take more than that.

“It’s going to take the will of the people that run the world. Whether it’s the

President of the United States or Boris Johnson.Those are the guys with the power. There needs to be a political will.” IOC President Thomas Bach promised last week that athletes would now be consulted on how they would like to support the core Olympic values “in a dignified way”. Thompson, who as a Laureus Academy Member helps disadvanta­ged young people around the world, feels frustrated at the pace of change over racism.

“You’d think 60 years after

I was born things would be getting better,” he said.

“They are, in loads of different areas in our lives, but certain areas haven’t changed a lot. Racism is one of those.”

Thompson insists that the year-long postponeme­nt of the Tokyo Games would not have hurt him were he still competing as “I’d have convinced myself that another nine months of hard work would only make me better”.

He believes fellow multievent­er and world champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson, inset, will also take it in her stride and has the potential to eclipse Dame Jessica EnnisHill and Denise Lewis as Britain’s greatest heptathlet­e.

“The great thing about sport is that you have to continuous­ly answer the question, ‘Can I cope next time’?” he said.

“Kat knows she can and it’s so good to see her grow mentally into her physical ability.

“If she comes into Tokyo with the same confidence she had last year, I see no reason why she can’t get better and she can’t win.”

 ??  ?? FRUSTRATED: Thompson
Since 2000, Laureus Sport for Good has used the power of sport to help change lives of almost six million children and young people.
Thompson on his way to winning gold in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games JUMPING FOR JOY
FRUSTRATED: Thompson Since 2000, Laureus Sport for Good has used the power of sport to help change lives of almost six million children and young people. Thompson on his way to winning gold in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games JUMPING FOR JOY

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