Texarkana Gazette

U.S. Olympic leaders eye change on protests amid wary athletes

- By Eddie Pells

DENVER — The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee is open to challengin­g IOC rules restrictin­g protests at the Olympics.

At the same time, some of the very athletes the federation is trying to help are angered that they have been kept out of the loop in key decisions.

The federation, in response to the nationwide protests following George Floyd’s killing, said it “stands with those who demand equality.” After that, CEO Sarah Hirshland announced the formation of an athletes’ working group that will, among other things, look into changing the IOC’s longstandi­ng rule banning political protests on Olympic medals stands.

But Hirshland’s first show of support for the athletes was immediatel­y panned by Gwen Berry, the African American hammer thrower who drew a 12-month probation from the USOPC after she raised her fist on the medals stand last summer at the Pan American Games.

And Hirshland’s second move was criticized because of frayed communicat­ions between the federation and its own athletes’ advisory council. The AAC is supposed to represent all U.S. Olympic athletes and has long struggled for an equal spot in the decision-making process.

“I don’t think these are bad ideas,” said U.S Track and Field CEO Max Siegel, who, as leader of the sport that places the majority of African Americans on the U.S. Olympic team, has been facilitati­ng discussion­s between athletes and the USOPC. “But the fact of the matter is that … the stakeholde­rs you’re trying to help, they want to be involved in the process, too.”

Berry’s complaint, in short, was that if the USOPC really stood with black athletes, it never would have sanctioned her.

She and Hirshland have spoken in what both have described as a productive conversati­on. But Berry isn’t completely satisfied. In an open letter shortly after their talk decrying the realities of the billion-dollar business of the Olympics, she wrote: “What I object to is any pretense that the athletes, and their rights, come first.”

At about the same time Berry and Hirshland spoke, the CEO also listened to athletes in two town-hall-style video meetings. Spurred by the feedback, she announced the USOPC was forming an athletes group to “challenge the rules and systems in our own organizati­on that create barriers to progress” on racial issues. It would also, she said, advocate for global change.

But that announceme­nt came before a full consultati­on with the advisory council. The chain of events frustrated the leaders of the athletes’ group.

“While there was a breakdown in communicat­ion last week with the USOPC, we must all focus on the larger task at hand: addressing life-threatenin­g racial injustice,” said Cody Mattern, the AAC’s first vice chair.

Hirshland conceded, “I’ll be first to readily acknowledg­e that communicat­ion is always something that can be readily improved and we continue to work on it.”

After the announceme­nt, another AAC member, gold-medal sprinter Moushaumi Robinson, was given a leading role and the

AAC was assured it will be the main driver of the group.

Hirshland said the group will not only be focusing on the protest restrictio­ns — codified in the IOC charter under “Rule 50” — but will also have a “much broader conversati­on about racism, and doing things that create a barrier to racism.”

A recasting of Rule 50 could be the sort of game-changing move that many athletes have sought since 1968, when sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith were sent home from the Mexico City Olympics for their indelible raised-fist salute on the medals stand.

The USOPC brings more athletes and more money to the IOC than any country. It has been reluctant to leverage its power since the departure of chairman Peter Ueberroth in 2008.

 ?? AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File ?? ■ In this Aug. 10, 2019, file photo, Gwendolyn “Gwen” Berry of the United States waves as she is introduced at the start of the women’s hammer throw final during competitio­n in Peru.
AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File ■ In this Aug. 10, 2019, file photo, Gwendolyn “Gwen” Berry of the United States waves as she is introduced at the start of the women’s hammer throw final during competitio­n in Peru.

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