National Post

Rio organizers gut Paralympic­s

Short of cash, event will be more spartan

- Cam Cole in Rio de Janeiro

Careening along l ike one of those nearly but never quite outof- control cliffside buses headed from Copacabana for the Olympic Park, the Rio Olympic Games nearly made it to the finish line without any really serious harm done.

But there is no laughing off all the slapdash preparatio­ns and equally half-measure fixes any more.

Rio 2016’s cost of putting out fires on a daily basis — throwing money the organizing committee didn’t have at problems it failed to plan for — finally has a victim: the Paralympic Games.

Lack of cash flow is going to result in a much less grand Paralympic­s, scheduled to begin Sept. 7, and potentiall­y a huge s t ep backward f or t he movement.

“Never before in t he 56- year history of the Paralympic Games have we faced circumstan­ces l i ke this,” Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee president Sir Philip Craven said in a statement.

Major budget cuts will mean the workforce for the Paralympic­s will be downsized, transport for athletes and their teams will be cut back, the Deodoro Olympic Park will be closed and dismantled, venue media centres will be closed — in short, as lacking as the Olympics were in the big- time “look of the Games”, t he Paralympic­s will be more spartan still.

“It’s in our Paralympic DNA to see obstacles as an opportunit­y to do things differentl­y, and that’s what we are doing here,” said Craven, voicing the IPC’s intention to press ahead with whatever can be salvaged. “We are problem- solvers by nature and fight for what we believe in. The opportunit­y we have here to make Rio, Brazil, Latin America and the world a more equitable place for all does not come around very often, so we have to grab it with both hands.

“We are working desperatel­y hard to protect athlete services, especially within the field of play. They have dedicated t heir l i ves to reaching these Games and we will do our utmost to try and maintain the service levels and scope that they expect at a Paralympic Games.” It won’t be easy. The Olympics themselves have experience­d shortages of food and water at venues. Add to that an exodus of volunteers, complainin­g of being underpaid and underfed, which has resulted in even vital areas such as doping control being short-staffed.

Poor attendance at many Olympic events has been an ongoing story, but only 12 per cent of Paralympic tickets have been sold and competing nations haven’t received their first instalment­s of support grants from Rio 2016. Craven said “around 10 countries” will have difficulty covering the costs of travel to the Games.

Until Friday’s bombshell announceme­nt, the worst of the Rio Olympics’ shortcomin­gs could be written off as annoying, inconvenie­nt or even humorous, but not truly damaging.

Rocks thrown through the windows of a media bus. A stray bullet likely fired at a blimp falling through the roof of the media centre at equestrian.

A pontoon from the marathon swim blowing away in the night. Buses that never came. Green water.

Even t he s haggy- dog story of American swimmer Ryan Lochte and his teammates claiming to have been robbed at gunpoint by bandits disguised as police — an incident that enraged Brazilians when it turned out to have been an invention — was at heart a case of vandalism and stupid, drunken entitlemen­t.

A door was broken, a wall urinated upon, Lochte’s teammate Jimmy Feigen paid an US$ 11,000 “donation to charity” to get to leave Brazil, and life goes on.

But now, not without Rio 2016 suffering a black eye. This was the one ball the organizing committee could not afford to drop without a load of bad publicity, though the committee’s spokesman Mario Andrada did his best to skate past the negatives Friday, as always.

When the main topic of conversati­on was Lochte and his very belated apology, Andrada said the Rio 2016 Twitter site had received 1.8 million people complainin­g about the incident, which accounted for 2.5 per cent of all mentions on the site since the beginning of the Games. He said the false allegation­s had “humiliated” Brazilians, but he accepted Lochte’s apology and said Brazilians would, too, and move on.

“And I don’t see this as being a factor that will mar these Games. As a matter of fact, I don’t think history cares much ( about) any negative fact that takes place during an Olympic Games ,” Andrada said. “What goes to history is the huge contributi­on by the athletes and also the artists when you think about the opening and closing ceremonies.

“So I think history will take from these Games the medals of Mr. ( Michael) Phelps, we’ ll take the passion of the fans, we’ ll take the huge, huge performanc­e from Mr. ( Usain) Bolt, and we’ ll take the memory of the extreme ambience and energy that we got at most of the competitio­ns.”

Maybe in Brazil, that’s how they teach history. In the wheelchair- accessible world, Rio 2016 is always going to have an asterisk.

I DON’T THINK HISTORY CARES (ABOUT) ANY NEGATIVE FACT.

 ?? SHAUN BOTTERILL / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Poor attendance at many Olympic events has been an ongoing story, but only 12 per cent of Paralympic tickets have been sold and competing nations haven’t received their first instalment­s of support grants from Rio 2016.
SHAUN BOTTERILL / GETTY IMAGES FILES Poor attendance at many Olympic events has been an ongoing story, but only 12 per cent of Paralympic tickets have been sold and competing nations haven’t received their first instalment­s of support grants from Rio 2016.
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