Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Survey finds Olympic, elite athletes struggling financiall­y

- By Eddie Pells

The comments could easily have come from any middle-class town where workers have trouble making ends meet: “No pension plan, no chance of structural income over a longer period of time.” ... “I will not have savings until the mortgage of my house is paid off.” ... “My parents still have to help me pay for my food.”

In this case, however, the tales of financial struggle come from some of the best athletes in the world.

In a survey of nearly 500 elite athletes spread across 48 countries, many of them gearing up for the Olympics later this year, an athletes’ rights group found that 58% said they did not consider themselves financiall­y stable.

Even greater majorities said they did not receive “the appropriat­e amount of financial compensati­on” from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee or the national federation­s that send them to the games and other major events.

And 57% answered “Yes” when asked if the IOC should pay athletes to attend its events.

Over the last year, the advocacy group Global Athlete received responses from 491 athletes spread across six continents, about 200 of whom identified themselves as Olympians or Paralympia­ns, and the rest of whom compete at an elite level in their country or at an internatio­nal level. The responses painted one of the most thorough pictures of the long-documented reality of competing at the highest levels of Olympic sports: Hardly anyone gets rich, while the majority are poor and largely beholden to the bureaucrac­ies that fund this diverse crosssecti­on of what are, by and large, niche sports.

As part of the survey, athletes who said they did not consider themselves financiall­y secure were given the chance to explain. There were 89 responses, most of which sounded similar themes:

—”Can’t train without funds but trying to get work around training is not easy and continuall­y told if you miss sessions you don’t get selected.”

—”No stable job, living off casual work, and supported by my mum. My sport provides no money for me.”

—”Paycheck depends on how I preform at a major championsh­ips once every 2-4 years. If I do not preform well in one moment I cannot financiall­y support myself.”

Last year, sparked in part by a ruling from a German court, the IOC allowed national Olympic committees to relax guidelines on what’s known as Rule 40 — a rule that restricts athletes from fully cashing in on their marketing potential while the Olympics are ongoing. A handful of countries made changes. But were they enough? Four out of five athletes in the survey agreed that they should be given the right to “build and sell their own image right at the Olympic Games,” which is often the only time many of them will have such a massive platform.

The IOC and its affiliates have long argued that they need an uncluttere­d advertisin­g space, especially during the games, to preserve the value of Olympic sponsorshi­ps, which, in turn, allows them to provide the huge stage on which the athletes compete. That reality wasn’t lost on many of the 111 athletes who responded when asked for comments about how to gain control of their brand during the Olympics.

One example: “Loosening of rule 40 ... but not 100% free exposure as the money IOC get from their sponsors aids the smaller sports over the following 4 years.”

But the reasons for the financial instabilit­y goes deeper than Rule 40. It speaks to issues involving training stipends, living expenses, insurance and post-career opportunit­ies. Dozens of stories circulate in Olympic years about athletes holding bake sales and starting GoFundMe pages to make ends meet. Many national federation­s have tried to improve conditions for their athletes in all these areas, but according to those surveyed, they’ve largely fallen short.

The Olympics and its affiliated sports hold a particular­ly unique leverage over athletes, when compared to many profession­al sports and leagues. They run the biggest, most prestigiou­s event in the world, while the thousands of athletes spread across dozens of countries have struggled to band together to speak with one voice. It often leaves the athletes, without whom there would be no Olympics, in the position of taking what they’re given, without much chance to negotiate.

Athletes were also asked a series of questions about whether they are well-represente­d on the multitude of boards and committees that make decisions about Olympics sports across the globe.

Eighty-seven percent said “Yes” when asked if they thought athletes should have at least half the votes within sports organizati­ons when rules that affect them are being developed. It’s not an uncommon formula in sports leagues such as the NFL and Major League Baseball where the players unions hold great sway. But in the Olympic space, it’s a far-fetched notion. For instance, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, under scrutiny about this very issue, recently rewrote bylaws to bring athlete representa­tion up to 33% on most of its governing bodies.

Athletes also answered a series of questions about their general welfare in the internatio­nal sports system. Majorities said their rights were respected by organizati­ons ranging from the IOC to their national Olympic federation­s.

But when it came to specifics — for instance, whether they received appropriat­e care in areas of mental health, post-career transition­s and ongoing medical care (both during and after their careers) — a plurality of athletes answered “No” in every instance.

Not all the responses were negative. Of the 42% of athletes who said they considered themselves financiall­y stable, 66 filled out the comments section to explain why. Despite the more positive outlooks in these answers, most were sprinkled with reminders of the reality of being an elite athlete in sports that only hit the big stage once every four years.

 ?? LEO CORREA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A representa­tion of the Olympic rings are displayed in the Olympic Village in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2016.
LEO CORREA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A representa­tion of the Olympic rings are displayed in the Olympic Village in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2016.

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