Albuquerque Journal

Lochte loses all four commercial endorsemen­ts after incident

- BY MATT BONESTEEL THE WASHINGTON POST

U.S. swimmer Ryan Lochte’s four commercial sponsors dropped the 12-time Olympic medal winner Monday in response to the incident last week in which he falsely claimed he and three teammates had been held up by armed robbers at a Rio de Janeiro gas station.

The decisions by Speedo, Ralph Lauren, Airweave and Gentle Hair Removal came after Lochte admitted to “over-exaggerati­ng” the armed-robbery claim, an assertion that overshadow­ed much of the second week of the Summer Olympics that ended Sunday.

Lochte, meanwhile, said he would continue to swim even if sanctioned by the U.S. Olympic Committee for his lack of honesty.

“I’m still going to be swimming,” he told TMZ in Los Angeles on Monday. “I’m swimming for another four years, so however long my suspension is, what the USOC says, I’m going to get back in the water and keep going.”

Lochte’s commercial sponsors announced they are parting ways with the swimmer, who initially claimed he and his teammates were robbed at gunpoint early Aug. 14 after a night of partying. Brazilian authoritie­s said the four vandalized a gas station and were told by an armed security guard that they had to pay for the damages before they were allowed to leave.

“While we have enjoyed a winning relationsh­ip with Ryan for over a decade and he has been

an important member of the Speedo team, we cannot condone behavior that is counter to the values this brand has long stood for,” Speedo, the swimwear company, said in a statement released Monday morning. “We appreciate his many achievemen­ts and hope he moves forward and learns from this experience.”

The company also announced that it would donate $50,000 of Lochte’s fee to the Save the Children charity, which will direct the money toward youngsters in Brazil. Lochte signed a reported 10-year deal with Speedo in 2006, meaning the agreement was near its end.

“I respect Speedo’s decision and am grateful for the opportunit­ies that our partnershi­p has afforded me over the years,” Lochte, 32, said in a statement following the swimwear company’s announceme­nt. “I am proud of the accomplish­ments that we have achieved together.”

Ralph Lauren followed soon after, with the apparel company announcing in a statement that it would be ending its associatio­n with Lochte.

“Ralph Lauren continues to proudly sponsor the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Team and the values that its athletes embody,” the statement read. “Ralph Lauren’s endorsemen­t agreement with Ryan Lochte was specifical­ly in support of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games and the company will not be renewing his contract.”

Syneron-Candela, parent company of Gentle Hair Removal, was the third to cut ties Monday, saying in a statement that it holds its employees “to high standards, and we expect the same of our business partners.”

Airweave, a Japanese mattress manufactur­er that had pledged to stand by Lochte, announced late Monday in a tweet that it, too, would drop him “after careful considerat­ion.”

Lochte’s portfolio has diminished in recent years. He had deals with Gillette, Mutual of Omaha, Nissan, AT&T and Gatorade ahead of the London Olympics in 2012 - bringing in a reported $2.3 million annually - but those deals all expired.

Lochte told TMZ that he has yet to make a decision about whether to seek help for his drinking. In his first televised mea culpa on NBC, he admitted he was “still intoxicate­d” when he made the initial robbery claim during an appearance on the network Aug. 14.

“It’s definitely something that I’m going to have to be more responsibl­e about,” Lochte told TMZ when asked about his drinking. “Everything that happened in Rio, I’m definitely going to learn from it. We’re human, we learn from our mistakes.

“Right now I need to just see my family and talk with them about what I’m going to do.”

 ?? MICHAEL SOHN/AP FILE ?? U.S. swimmer Ryan Lochte fabricated a tale that he was robbed at gunpoint in Rio, and is now paying the price in lost endorsemen­ts.
MICHAEL SOHN/AP FILE U.S. swimmer Ryan Lochte fabricated a tale that he was robbed at gunpoint in Rio, and is now paying the price in lost endorsemen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States