The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Citing health problems, Scott Blackmun to leave USOC

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COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. » Scott Blackmun is resigning as CEO of the US Olympic Committee, citing health problems as the reason he’ll depart after leading the federation for more than eight years.

The 60-year-old CEO was diagnosed with prostate cancer earlier this winter, and did not attend the Pyeongchan­g Games.

He announced his resignatio­n Wednesday and Susanne Lyons, a member of the board, will serve as acting CEO.

Blackmun leaves the federation amid calls for his departure, including from two U.S. Senators, who said neither he nor the USOC as a whole have done enough to react to sex abuse cases inside the U.S. gymnastics team.

The USOC is conducting an independen­t review of when Blackmun and others learned the details about abuse cases at USA Gymnastics and whether they responded appropriat­ely.

At a news conference to kick off the Olympics, USOC chairman Larry Probst said Blackmun had served the USOC with distinctio­n and the board found no reason to relieve him.

“Given Scott’s current health situation, we have mutually agreed it is in the best interest of both Scott and the USOC that we identify new leadership so that we can immediatel­y address the urgent initiative­s ahead of us,” Probst said Wednesday.

The USOC said it was starting many initiative­s, including providing new funding and resources for victims of Larry Nassar, the doctor who abused members of the U.S. gymnastics team. It also will review its relationsh­ips with national governing bodies of Olympic sports and double funding to the U.S. Center for SafeSport.

Blackmun’s last several years at the helm of the USOC have been focused on establishi­ng the center, which stemmed out of task forces to determine how to compel governing bodies of all Olympic sports to use the same rules about reporting and the handling of abuse cases.

It was a herculean task that involved raising millions of dollars to start an independen­t organizati­on that polices abuse cases in a similar manner as the independen­t U.S. Anti-Doping Agency runs doping control in the United States.

But all the cases in question — including dozens involving USA Swimming and USA Gymnastics — occurred before the new protocols came into play. The shocking testimony from dozens of gymnasts who were abused by Nassar led to calls for a complete turnover of the USA Gymnastics board, and then for Blackmun’s removal.

Blackmun started as CEO just before the 2010 Vancouver Games and settled an organizati­on that had been rife with infighting after the surprise removal of Jim Scherr and his replacemen­t with Stephanie Streeter, who lasted less than two years.

Blackmun smoothed over rocky relationsh­ips with national governing bodies and with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, renegotiat­ing an agreement over sharing revenues from TV and sponsorshi­p deals that caused problems between the two entities for years.

The reworked deal smoothed the way for the USOC to bring the Olympics back to the United States for the first time since 2002, when it landed the 2028 Games for Los Angeles. Some, however, criticized that deal as a consolatio­n prize; LA really bid for the 2024 Games, which were awarded to Paris, and the IOC ended up granting 2028 to LA, which was the only other candidate for 2024.

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