Orlando Sentinel

Scandal-hit USOC names new CEO

- By Eddie Pells

DENVER — Sarah Hirshland is known as the tough negotiator who helped the U.S. Golf Associatio­n broker media and sponsorshi­p deals, including its 12-year TV contract with Fox.

Her next job, as CEO of the U.S. Olympic Committee, will be a more delicate task — repairing a frayed relationsh­ip with athletes and a community that has grown wary of the governing body after a slew of sex-abuse cases they feel were not handled appropriat­ely.

The USOC announced the USGA’s chief commercial officer as the new CEO on Thursday. She’ll replace Scott Blackmun, who resigned earlier this year to deal with health issues that undercut his ability to deal with the sex-abuse crisis that engulfed the federation.

“The USOC is at a critical time in its history and requires an energetic, creative and inspiring leader who is capable of building on past success while making sure that the athletes we serve are protected, supported and empowered in every possible way,” USOC chairman Larry Probst said.

The USOC embarked on a four-month search that brought more than a dozen candidates into the fold. Hirshland will start the job later this month.

Before the USGA, she worked with Casey Wasserman, the chair of the LA 2028 Olympic effort, at Wasserman Media Group.

Wasserman called her a visionary leader. USGA CEO Mike Davis said golf’s return to the Olympics in 2016 helped Hirshland become familiar with the movement, “and now, with Sarah at the helm, this connection will only be strengthen­ed.”

But Hirshland’s top task will be restoring credibilit­y to the USOC’s efforts to provide safe atmosphere­s for its athletes. Sex-abuse scandals in swimming, gymnastics and taekwondo — to name a few — forced the USOC to create more uniform standards to protect athletes across all Olympic sports.

But the USOC’s portrayal of itself as a federation that only truly oversees the athletes during the three-week Olympic period every two years rubbed many people wrong, and made it sound as if its leaders weren’t ultimately responsibl­e for the welfare of the athletes.

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