Imperial Valley Press

IOC approves 3 candidate bids for 2026 Winter Olympics

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has three official candidates to host the 2026 Winter Games and a new timetable to pick the winner.

Now the Olympic body needs to overcome “bad faith” — of local people and activists who believe staging the games is too expensive — to ensure all three candidates stay on the ballot next June, IOC members were told Tuesday

“We have to make a huge effort in explaining ourselves better,” IOC vice president Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr. said Tuesday. “It is not getting across with sufficient strength.”

The 2026 Olympics contest is between Calgary, Canada; Stockholm, Sweden; and the combined Italian bid of Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo after IOC members formally backed the bids recommende­d last week by their executive board.

A fourth contender, Erzurum in Turkey, was dropped by the board last week amid concern about high spending on essential projects.

Calgary, which also hosted in 1988, could yet drop out after a Nov. 13 referendum.

Full support of federal and local government­s is also not guaranteed in Sweden or Italy.

These are the latest public tests of trust in Olympic hosting since Russia spent $51 billion to prepare for the 2014 Sochi Winter Games.

Voters in Switzerlan­d and Austria already toppled potential 2026 bids. Recent Olympic hosting contests saw bids fail due to public opposition or government doubts in Scandinavi­a, Germany, Hungary, Italy and Switzerlan­d. Boston also was briefly in the 2024 Olympics contest, before Los Angeles stepped in and was awarded the 2028 edition.

IOC member Alex Gilady of Israel blamed it on a “very few, very noisy people” who want to harm the Olympics in a debate on Tuesday about creating more flexible bid races and more efficient hosting projects.

Samaranch, who led the IOC panel studying 2026 contenders, suggested some opposition was by “people that do that on bad faith,” and urged Olympic officials to fight with facts.

 ??  ?? Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach gives a press conference at the end of the 133rd IOC session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Tuesday. AP PHOTO/NATACHA PISARENKO
Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach gives a press conference at the end of the 133rd IOC session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Tuesday. AP PHOTO/NATACHA PISARENKO

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