Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AP finds Olympic funding shortage

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DENVER — At least 70% of U.S. Olympic sports organizati­ons have applied for government funds during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Associated Press surveyed 44 of the country’s national governing bodies (NGBs) — the organizati­ons charged with operating programs from the grassroots through the Olympic levels in sports that run the gamut from badminton to basketball.

All but four of the 36 NGBs that responded said they had applied for assistance from the Paycheck Protection Program. Not all of the organizati­ons revealed how much they received, but those who did have been approved for a cumulative total of about $12 million.

Beginning in July 2021, when the delayed Summer Olympics are scheduled to start, U.S. NGBs will send a total of around 1,150 athletes to two Olympics and two Paralympic­s over the span of seven months. While Mikaela Shiffrin, Noah Lyles and the U.S. basketball teams are on solid financial footing because of their star power and marketabil­ity, the U.S. will depend on dozens of lesser-known athletes to dominate the medals table in Tokyo and at the Winter Games in Beijing.

It puts the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and the NGBs on an urgent track to fund all the potential medalists, many of whom haven’t been able to train properly for months.

“There’s a very, very real and dire financial situation in sport,” said Sarah Hirshland, the CEO of the USOPC, which oversees the NGBs. “And certainly, the sports organizati­ons we work with closely are feeling revenue pain. And it’s immediate.”

The results of the survey were eye-opening, not only because of the sheer number of NGBs that applied but also because the request for federal money counters the long-held and distinctly American tradition of not using taxpayer money to pursue Olympic glory.

Sports federation­s in most other countries are buttressed by government financial assistance. The U.S. team, which has amassed a world-leading 653 medals in Summer and Winter games since 2000, relies on broadcast fees, sponsorshi­ps, charitable donations, and revenue from programmin­g and membership­s.

But without the revenue generated by normal day-to-day business — to say nothing of an NBC cash infusion of at least $170 million that would’ve come into the USOPC coffers this year had the Tokyo Games not been postponed — the financial model of the U.S. Olympic sports system is imperiled.

Last month, Hirshland said the USOPC board was aiming to trim this year’s expenses by as much as 20%. It has committed to sparing the NGBs from the cutting block for

2020, but also warned that a full cancellati­on of the Olympics — a possibilit­y not being ruled out — would be “devastatin­g” for U.S. sports.

The level to which NGBs rely on USOPC funding varies, based largely on their sizes. Even without any USOPC-related cuts in 2020, some of these organizati­ons are teetering on the edge of financial solvency — missing millions in revenue from events, membership dues, clinics and other fee-based operations that keep organizati­ons and their sports running. A survey earlier this year estimated they would endure a collective revenue shortfall of $121 million from February through June because

of coronaviru­s-related shutdowns.

“We all are exposed, but to be really candid, it’s probably what it should be,” said Max Cobb, the president of US Biathlon, who also leads the NGB Council in the U.S. “We’re all nonprofit organizati­ons. We put all the revenues back into our sports programs. In only a few cases have NGBs been able to develop a significan­t contingenc­y fund.”

A number of NGBs didn’t divulge the full details of their requests. Those that did received amounts ranging from $2.5 million (US Ski and Snowboard) down to $75,000 (USA Badminton).

A plurality of those who responded received loans in the mid-six figures.

Those amounts reflect the modest sizes of the organizati­ons, many of which have fewer than a dozen employees who are responsibl­e for all aspects of their sports, from nurturing Olympic dreams to tending to the grass-roots tentacles that grow in towns and cities across the country and, eventually, produce Olympians.

The USOPC, always wary of asking the government for cash, directed NGBs to look into securing funds from the government program. All efforts, Hirshland said, have been geared toward “supporting sports at a community level and supporting the [grass-roots] pipeline” that leads to elite sports.

 ?? (AP/Gregory Bull) ?? Simone Biles competes on the balance beam during the 2016 U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials. At least 70% of the U.S. Olympic sports organizati­ons have applied for government funds during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The Associated Press surveyed 44 of the country’s national governing bodies. All but four of the 36 who responded said they applied for federal assistance.
(AP/Gregory Bull) Simone Biles competes on the balance beam during the 2016 U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials. At least 70% of the U.S. Olympic sports organizati­ons have applied for government funds during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The Associated Press surveyed 44 of the country’s national governing bodies. All but four of the 36 who responded said they applied for federal assistance.

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