Edmonton Journal

Australia squabbles about athlete funding for Tokyo Olympics

- IAN RANSOM

MELBOURNE If bickering over funding was an Olympic sport, Australia would be in line for a gold medal.

Just five months before the Tokyo Games begin, a war of words has broken out between the Australian Sports Council (ASC), the government agency in charge of disbursing funding, and the Australian Olympic Committee (AOC), which pays for athletes to compete at the Games.

While the organizati­ons might be expected to be working handin-glove to put athletes on podiums, they are instead squabbling in public over the use of hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer funding for high-performanc­e sport, which the ASC has said is up for review after the Olympics.

“The sports don’t want to know if their funding is good for the next six months,” AOC president John Coates told reporters in Sydney this week. “They want to know for the next four years, so they can go ahead and employ coaches.”

At the turn of the century, Australia prided itself in punching above its weight class at the Olympics, but medal counts have plummeted since 2004.

After finishing fourth at the Athens Games with 17 golds among its 50 medals, Australia dropped to sixth in Beijing (14 golds, 46 medals) and eighth in London (eight golds, 35 medals). Four years ago in Rio, the country was 10th with eight golds and 29 medals — its lowest Olympic tally in 28 years.

With each setback, relations have soured dramatical­ly between the AOC and the sports-funding bureaucrac­y.

The year after Rio, Coates accused ASC chair John Wylie, an investment banker, of a campaign to undermine him during a failed challenge for the AOC presidency.

Two years ago, Coates said the ASC and other “barbarians at the gate” were seeking to raid the AOC’S Us$99-million foundation, which helps cover athletes’ training and costs at the Games.

The pair no longer speak to each other, using national media to make claim and counter-claim.

The Australian, a conservati­ve newspaper owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., has launched a concerted attack on the ASC’S spending on overheads and alleged the agency is set to slash funding for sports that have low medal-winning prospects.

While the ASC has spent millions on consultant­s and management training programs, the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra is now reported to be a “ghost town” due to funding cuts. Wylie has defended the ASC’S performanc­e and its top executives.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada