Los Angeles Times

2028 Olympics? L.A. isn’t saying no

Local group bidding for the 2024 Games signals willingnes­s to cooperate with IOC.

- By David Wharton david.wharton@latimes.com Twitter: @LAtimesWha­rton

Los Angeles may have inched closer to hosting the Summer Olympics in 2028 — not 2024 — with a statement released Wednesday by the private bid committee trying to bring the Games back to Southern California.

In an open letter, LA 2024 chairman Casey Wasserman addressed expectatio­ns that the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee will seek to name two winners in the current bid competitio­n between his city and Paris, giving 2024 to one and 2028 to the other.

That scenario works only if one of the candidates agrees to go second.

“To be blunt, LA 2024 has never been only about L.A. or 2024,” Wasserman said in the statement. “Even when the issue of a dual award for the 2024 and 2028 Games was initially raised, we didn’t say it’s ‘L.A. first’ or it’s ‘now or never’ for L.A. That sounds like an ultimatum.

“We could have used that strategy, but we didn’t because we thought it was presumptuo­us to tell the IOC what to do and how to think. We’re better partners than that.”

Those words prompted at least one Olympic media outlet to declare L.A. had ceded the race — a suggestion that local bid leaders quickly denied.

There are, in fact, several ways to look at what Wasserman said.

For much of its campaign, LA 2024 has sought to play the role of the good guy, distancing itself from the arrogant “ugly American” tag hung on previous unsuccessf­ul U.S. bids.

This stance becomes even more relevant at a time when President Trump has rankled leaders around the world.

Wednesday’s statement continued LA 2024’s strategy while also serving as a thinly veiled dig at Paris, which has repeatedly pushed back against the idea of accepting 2028.

But none of that diminishes that Wasserman clearly signaled a willingnes­s to cooperate with the potential two-winner arrangemen­t. The timing is significan­t.

Olympic leaders recently asked both bid committees what they might want in exchange for going second. While negotiatio­ns proceed, procedural steps must be taken.

On Friday, the IOC’s executive board will decide whether to recommend the unusual move. Membership would then vote at a midJuly meeting in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.

Though there could be resistance from members who don’t want their primary job — choosing host cities — taken away for the next eight years, the option is enticing to a movement that has seen numerous candidate cities withdraw over cost concerns.

LA 2024’s message, which mentions partnershi­p more than once, offers reassuranc­e and, from Wasserman’s standpoint, some insurance in a close race against another strong bid.

Host city votes have always been unpredicta­ble, with favorites falling by the wayside as dark horses emerge for no predictabl­e reason.

L.A. is considered the more economical­ly stable choice for 2024 because it relies almost entirely on existing stadiums and arenas. That could also make the city a better bet to remain viable until 2028.

Paris has insisted constructi­on of a costly athletes village could not be delayed. The City of Light also holds a sentimenta­l edge, looking to bring the Games back 100 years after it last hosted them in 1924.

So a two-winner scenario would guarantee that L.A. gets the Olympics. It would give Wasserman tangible results for the $50 million or so he raised to fund the bid.

Does that mean LA 2024 blinked first in a game of chicken? Perhaps.

But nothing precludes the bid committee’s continuing to campaign for 2024 in the months before September’s ultimate vote. Or seeking a bigger slice of IOC revenues and other concession­s in exchange for waiting around.

“It has always been our contention that LA 2024 had to make as much sense for the Olympic movement as it did for the people of L.A.,” Wasserman stated. “And we’ve stuck to that premise.”

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