Big Spring Herald

IOC gives itself more power to remove sports from Olympics

- By GRAHAM DUNBAR AP Sports Writer

TOKYO — The IOC gave itself more power Sunday to remove sports from the Olympic program.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee voted in the new powers amid prolonged issues with the leadership of weightlift­ing and boxing. Both sports already had their quota of athletes cut for the 2024 Paris Olympics and weightlift­ing could be dropped entirely.

The Olympic Charter was amended so the full IOC membership can remove a sport if its governing body does not comply with a decision made by the IOC executive board or if it "acts in a manner likely to tarnish the reputation of the Olympic movement."

The IOC widened its authority by adding a "but not limited to" clause that goes beyond the stated reasons for removing a sport.

The executive board, which is chaired by IOC President Thomas Bach, also got new powers to suspend a sport or event discipline from the Olympics if its governing body refuses to comply with a decision.

The need for new rules was presented to the membership by IOC vice president John Coates, who also leads the Olympic body's legal commission and is a close Bach ally.

"In the recent past, the IOC has been confronted with situations raising serious concerns regarding the governance of certain internatio­nal federation­s," Coates said at the end-of-Games meeting.

Weightlift­ing is most at risk of being cut from the Paris Olympics because of long-term doping cases and governance issues, including financial corruption. The Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation was led for two decades until last year by longtime former IOC member Tamás Aján. The governing body's problems were detailed in an investigat­ive program by German broadcaste­r ARD.

Boxing at the Tokyo Games was taken out of the control of the

Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n two years ago after doubts about the integrity of bouts at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics and IOC concerns about its presidenti­al elections. The IOC will now look at boxing's performanc­e at the Tokyo Olympics and AIBA's ongoing reforms under president Umar Kremlev before deciding whether to reinstate its official recognitio­n.

Boxing and weightlift­ing are among 28 core sports locked into the Olympic program, while host cities can apply to add others that appeal to a domestic market. Tokyo added baseball, softball and karate to this year's Games, and also gave debuts to skateboard­ing, sport climbing and surfing, which chimed with the IOC's attempt to woo young viewers.

Breakdanci­ng will debut in Paris while skateboard­ing, climbing and surfing will be retained.

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