Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blackmun resigns

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Scott Blackmun, 60, resigned as the chief executive officer of the U.S. Olympic Committee on Wednesday, stepping aside so he can tackle his worsening bout with prostate cancer and to allow the federation to address the sexabuse scandal that has rocked gymnastics and other sports.

Scott Blackmun resigned as the chief executive officer of the U.S. Olympic Committee on Wednesday, stepping aside so he can tackle his worsening bout with prostate cancer and to allow the federation to move forward under new leadership to address the sexabuse scandal that has rocked gymnastics and other sports.

Blackmun, 60, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in January and did not attend the Pyeongchan­g Games in South Korea.

He leaves as calls for his ouster were growing louder — from two U.S. senators and, more notably, from a number of gymnasts and other athletes who said neither he nor the USOC at large reacted properly to cases including those involving Larry Nassar, the doctor who sexually abused members of the U.S. gymnastics team.

The USOC is conducting an independen­t review of when Blackmun and others learned the details about abuse cases at USA Gymnastics and whether they responded appropriat­ely.

Susanne Lyons, a member of the board, will step down from that position and serve as acting CEO while the search for Blackmun’s replacemen­t begins.

At a news conference to kick off the Olympics, Chairman Larry Probst said Blackmun had served the USOC with distinctio­n and the board found no reason to relieve him. In an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday, Probst said Blackmun has since received more informatio­n about the treatment he’ll need.

“We need a CEO in place who can [tend] to this current situation and work hard to get things back on a positive track,” Probst said.

The USOC said it was starting several initiative­s, including providing new funding and resources for Nassar victims and others in Olympic sports who have been subject to abuse; sex-abuse cases in swimming, taekwondo and speedskati­ng have also occurred during Blackmun’s tenure. The USOC also will review its relationsh­ips with national governing bodies of Olympic sports and double funding to the U.S. Center for SafeSport.

John Manly, an attorney representi­ng Nassar victims in a lawsuit that seeks monetary damages and court oversight of USA Gymnastics, said it was victims speaking out about the USOC that forced Blackmun to resign.

“USOC has focused nearly all its efforts on money and medals while the safety of our athletes has taken a back seat,” Manly said.

Blackmun’s last several years at the helm of USOC have focused on establishi­ng the SafeSport organizati­on, which formed to compel all Olympic sports organizati­ons to use the same rules for reporting and handling abuse cases.

Blackmun started as CEO just before the 2010 Vancouver Games and settled an organizati­on that had been rife with infighting after the surprise removal of Jim Scherr and his replacemen­t with Stephanie Streeter, who lasted barely a year.

Blackmun patched rocky relationsh­ips with national governing bodies and with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, renegotiat­ing an agreement over sharing revenues from TV and sponsorshi­p deals that caused problems between the two entities for years.

The reworked deal smoothed the way for the USOC to bring the Olympics back to the United States for the first time since 2002, when it landed the 2028 Games for Los Angeles. Some, however, criticized that deal as a consolatio­n prize; LA really bid for the 2024 Games, which were awarded to Paris, and the IOC ended up granting 2028 to Los Angeles at the same time as the only other candidate for 2024.

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