The Korea Times

IOC seeks to look at double Olympic picks

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— The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has moved closer toward picking both Los Angeles and Paris to host a Summer Games in an unpreceden­ted double vote this year.

IOC President Thomas Bach has repeatedly hinted at picking both LA and Paris by awarding both the 2024 and 2028 Summer Games hosting rights at the IOC Session on Sept. 13.

Only the 2024 games is currently scheduled to be voted on in Lima, Peru.

“All the options are on the table, and this includes also the ‘24-’28 procedure and vote,” Bach said Friday when announcing a working group to study changing the candidate process.

The IOC executive board asked its four vice presidents to “explore changes” in Olympic bidding and report back in July.

“We have two excellent candidates there from two major Olympic countries,” Bach said at a news conference after a two-day board meeting. “This is a position you like to be in.”

Bach said the four-man working group will make proposals to the board and full membership. They meet from July 9-12 in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, where LA and Paris will make formal presentati­ons of their 2024 hosting plans.

A full IOC meeting can change the Olympic Charter which currently says host cities must be picked seven years in advance.

“You must always have room for interpreta­tion to adapt to changing times,” said Bach, who noted that he co-wrote the current book of Olympic rules. “The charter is flexible enough also in this respect.”

Los Angeles and Paris are in a two-candidate race after several rivals dropped out facing public opposition to expected spiraling costs and doubts about the long-term value of being an Olympic host.

Since December, Bach has repeated warnings about a bid process that produces “too many losers,” suggesting concerns that the city which lost a 2024 vote would not return with a candidacy for the 2028 Olympics.

“We are in a comfortabl­e situation now it will be up to the working group how to best explore, how to best exploit, the positive situation,” Bach said. “We should not miss the opportunit­y to explore this opportunit­y.”

The four vice presidents are John Coates of Australia, Yu Zaiqing of China, Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr. of Spain and Ugur Erdener of Turkey. Bach returned his focus to curbing excessive spending by hosts by welcoming budget cuts by organizers of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Talks between government and Olympic officials have reduced the expected costs to $15.2 billion from an initial $30 billion estimate, Bach said, adding that “even more savings can be made.”

A discrimina­tion issue for the Tokyo games could be resolved this weekend, Bach said. The Kasumigase­ki Country Club which was picked to stage men’s and women’s golf tournament­s will have a board meeting to review its policy of not allowing women as full members. “The Olympic Games are about non-discrimina­tion in every respect,” Bach said, adding he hoped the club will “grant the same rights to women as for men.”

 ?? Yonhap ?? Thomas Bach
Yonhap Thomas Bach

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