Saturday, 29 November 2014

IOC President in Dakar for the Summit of the French-speaking world

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IOC President in Dakar for the Summit of the French-speaking world
29/11/2014
With only a few days until the opening in Monaco of the IOC Session, which is preparing to approve Olympic Agenda 2020 – the roadmap that will define the future of the Olympic Movement – IOC President Thomas Bach arrived in Dakar (Senegal), where the XV Summit of the French-speaking world opens today. It is the first time that an IOC President – as the only guest among some 40 heads of state and government – has attended this Summit, which is held every two years.
In parallel to the Summit, the IOC President will meet a number of heads of state and government present in Dakar in order to discuss the role that sport can play in society and the importance of the Olympic Movement in shaping an active youth and building lasting peace. The President will reaffirm the need for the IOC to maintain its independence while at the same time ensuring a continuous dialogue with the world's political leaders.
The President will take advantage of the event to award the highest Olympic distinction, the Olympic Order in gold, to the former President of the Republic of Senegal and current Secretary General of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (OIF), Abdou Diouf, who is nearing the end of his term of office. The President praised the work and commitment of Mr Diouf in promoting the French language within Olympism.

The XV Summit of the French-speaking world is taking place on Saturday and Sunday in the Senegalese capital, and will conclude with the election of a new Secretary General of the OIF.

Thursday, 27 November 2014

IOC and IFs team up to protect clean athletes

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IOC and IFs team up to protect clean athletes
©IOC/Chris Graythen
27/11/2014
At a dedicated IOC Sports Integrity Workshop that took place in Lausanne on Wednesday, the IOC together with INTERPOL and both the Summer and Winter Olympic International Federations (IFs) looked into how best to protect sport from competition manipulation. Defending and protecting clean athletes is a top priority of the IOC and within Olympic Agenda 2020, the strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement, initiated by IOC President Thomas Bach and expected to be approved by the IOC full membership in Monaco on 8 and 9 December.
The event was co-organised by the IOC, the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF) and the International Centre for Sports Studies (CIES).
ASOIF President Francesco Ricci Bitti said: “In concluding today’s Workshop, ASOIF President Francesco Ricci-Bitti stated ‘Today’s Workshop, with the testimony provided by INTERPOL and the Tennis Integrity Unit, showed the complexity of the problem that sport is facing. The IOC, as the umbrella organisation for sport, has taken the lead to address this problem and we thank them for their dedication.”
17 IFs already signed up to new “IBIS” intelligence system At today’s workshop, the IOC presented IBIS, its Integrity Betting Intelligence System, to the IFs. IBIS has been designed to become the primary source of betting information for the Olympic Movement, and aims to step up the fight against manipulation and corruption linked to sports betting. All seven International Olympic Winter Federations signed up ahead of the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, for which IBIS was operational for the first time and proved to be very successful. In view of the next Olympic Games in Rio in 2016, all 28 Olympic Summer Federations will have signed up to IBIS and will be integrated into the IOC’s intelligence system. Ten of them are already on board, with the latest additions being the sports of aquatics, badminton and boxing.  Football will continue to use its own monitoring system, but has already signed a partnership agreement with the IOC committing to a mutual exchange of information.
Permanent support system for IFsChristophe De Kepper, IOC Director General, said: “The high participation of IFs in today’s workshop and the great interest they have shown in joining IBIS is very encouraging. Clearly, the IFs have a major role to play when it comes to protecting their sports from competition manipulation, and today was another occasion for the IOC to give them the tools to do so. The IOC runs and finances IBIS which remains operational between editions of the Olympic Games. It is only logical for the IFs to take advantage of this opportunity and use IBIS at their major international events and other multisport events.”
Read the factsheet about IBIS here.
IOC-INTERPOL partnershipBesides the presentation of IBIS, the workshop also addressed the use of investigatory procedures and the education of the IFs’ stakeholders about the risk of competition manipulation. INTERPOL, which has worked in close partnership with the IOC for several years, explained the process of a criminal investigation and how it differs from a sports disciplinary one. The IOC strengthened its partnership with INTERPOL through an official Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) earlier this year, widening the scope of previous activities between the two organisations. The global implementation of activities will begin in January 2015 with joint initiatives planned in the field of training and awareness-raising for sports organisations and law enforcement agencies, including joint workshops and tailored training material.
Learn more about the IOC’s initiatives to protect clean athletes and to educate about the risk of competition manipulation here.

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Nine centres worldwide recognised as IOC Research Centres for Prevention of Injury and Protection of Athlete Health

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Nine centres worldwide recognised as IOC Research Centres for Prevention of Injury and Protection of Athlete Health
©Getty
25/11/2014
Protecting athletes’ health and preventing injuries and illnesses in sport are top priorities for the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and its Medical Commission. Nine research centres from across the world have thus been named as IOC Research Centres for Prevention of Injury and Protection of Athlete Health.
These centres are:
  • Australian Centre for Research into Injury in Sport and its Prevention, Federation University Australia, Australia
  • Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre, University of Calgary, Canada
  • Institute of Sports Medicine, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark
  • Yonsei University, Republic of Korea (South Korea)
  • Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports, VU University and Academic Medical Centre, Netherlands
  • Oslo Sports Trauma Research Centre, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Norway
  • Aspetar, Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Qatar
  • Clinical Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Group, University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • London’s Institute for Sports, Exercise and Health (ISEH) and National Centre for Sports Exercise and Medicine (NCSEM), United Kingdom
Over the next four years, these centres will be tasked with researching, developing and implementing effective preventive and treatment methods for sports-related injuries and illnesses. They will receive financial support from the IOC and join an international network of expert scientists and clinicians in sports-injury and disease-prevention research.
“We are delighted to have appointed nine highly qualified centres from the four corners of the world to assist us with our mission,” commented IOC Medical Commission Chair and Executive Board member Dr Uğur Erdener. “These centres have all demonstrated that they are at the forefront of research in sports medicine and are committed to our shared goal of using knowledge and resources to ensure the athletes’ well-being so that sportsmen and women can perform at their best level with minimal risks to their health.”  
The IOC Head of Scientific Activities, Lars Engebretsen, added: “While athletes were previously active until they were 25, today they compete until they are 40 to 45 at a very high level. An injury to one of them is a major issue, so treatment and prevention have become all the more important.”
Since 2009, the IOC, under the leadership of its Medical Commission, has supported and partnered with established research centres from around the world which have demonstrated clinical, educational, and research expertise in the fields of sports medicine and elite sports to promote the athletes’ health through the prevention of injury and illness.  
Collaborating closely with the newly-appointed nine research centres, the IOC aims to further promote and protect the health of athletes by:
  • Establishing long-term research programmes on injury and disease prevention (including underlying studies on epidemiology, risk factors, and mechanisms),
  • Fostering collaborative relationships with individuals, institutions and organisations to improve athletes’ health,
  • Implementing applied, ongoing and novel research and development within the framework and long-term strategy of the IOC,
  • Setting up knowledge translation mechanisms to share scientific research results with the field throughout the Olympic Movement and sports community and to convert these results into concrete actions to protect the health of the athletes.
Learn more about the IOC Medical Commission
The International Olympic Committee is a not-for-profit independent international organisation made up of volunteers, which is committed to building a better world through sport. It redistributes more than 90 per cent of its income to the wider sporting movement, helping athletes and sports organisations at all levels around the world.

Say hello to the mascots of Rio 2016

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Say hello to the mascots of Rio 2016
©RIO 2016
24/11/2014
The mascots for the Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games have said Oi! (hello!) to the world for the first time. Inspired by the fauna and flora of Brazil, the mascots feature various influences from pop culture, along with elements of animation and computer game characters.
The mascots blend fiction and reality and were both born on 2 October 2009, when Rio de Janeiro was elected to host the Games and the people’s great joy was felt by nature. It was from this energy that the mascots were created.
The Olympic mascot is a mixture of the different animals of Brazil. It lives its life by playing, jumping, running and smiling, and it can stretch and stretch and stretch itself, as much as it wants. As a mixture of Brazilian animals, it can also do the same things they can, like run faster, jump higher, and be stronger. It’s also able to imitate the voice of any animal, so it’s super communicative. 
The Olympic mascot plays all the Olympic sports and its favourite pastime is making new friends. Its best friend is the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games mascot. It lives in a tree-house, in the Tijuca Forest, from where it can see the whole city and plan animal adventures. The mascot’s mission is to spread joy throughout the world and celebrate the friendship that flourishes between people from all over the world at this super sports event.
The Paralympic mascot is a unique mixture of Brazilian flora. It is able to pull crazy objects out of his head of leaves in order to get out of any jam. It knows all the secrets of nature and understands that with creativity, intelligence and determination, we can achieve whatever we want. It plays all the Paralympic sports and loves samba and all kinds of Brazilian music. Its mission is to inspire everybody to use creativity and determination to always reach further and have fun.
After the mascots’ unveiling, a poll to decide their names was opened. Everyone can vote for their choice from a shortlist of three pairs of names, one for the Olympic mascot, the other for the Paralympic mascot, respectively. The name choices are Oba and Eba; Tiba Tuque and Esquindim; and Vinicius and Tom. People can vote at www.rio2016.com/mascots as well as on the Rio 2016 Twitter feed (@Rio2016). Both mascots will have their own website and profiles on social media.

Monday, 24 November 2014

Beckie Scott: “An atmosphere of friendship and universal camaraderie”

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Beckie Scott: “An atmosphere of friendship and universal camaraderie”

21/11/2014
Canada’s Beckie Scott was the first North American female cross-country skier to step on to the Olympic podium, winning a gold medal in Salt Lake City in 2002 and a silver medal in Turin in 2006. She talks about her feelings in this new episode of our Words of Olympians video series.
Before being elected for eight years by her peers to the IOC Athletes’ Commission in
2006 in Turin, becoming a member of the Administration Board of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Games Organising Committee (VANOC), then Chef de Mission of the Canadian team for the Innsbruck Youth Olympic Games in 2012, Beckie Scott was best female Canadian cross-country skier and the first North American to win an Olympic title in her sport. On 15 February 2002, at the Soldier Hollow venue at the Salt Lake City Games, she finished third in the 5km + 5km combined pursuit behind Russians Olga Danilova and Larissa Lazutina, who were later both disqualified for doping. Beckie thus received her gold medal at a moving ceremony, celebrated by hundreds of people in Vancouver in June 2004.
Recalling her step up to the third level of the podium in the mountains of Utah, Beckie said: “The best moment of all for me was after winning a medal in Salt Lake City, sharing that with my teammates and my friends and family who had come to watch. I think the moment of just being all together in that celebration was the most enjoyable and memorable. It’s a kind of hard feeling to describe, because it’s a very emotional moment, but it’s also a little bit magical. Because it’s a time you’ve been looking, and reaching and driving for, for so long… and to realise it is just amazing.”
Coached on the cross-country trails by a devoted father, Beckie Scott started competing at the age of 7, was a brilliant junior, then a serious contender at the World Cup, and won 17 medals in the sprint, pursuit and relay between 2001 and 2006 - the year she retired from competition - but also another Olympic medal. Indeed, she took silver in the team sprint at the Turin Games with Sara Renner.
A three-time Olympian, Beckie Scott recalls above all: “the atmosphere of friendship and universal camaraderie – it’s so many people from so many places all over the world, coming together to par-ticipate in a sporting  competition. And yes, it’s high level, and it’s very competitive; but there’s also this element of universal friendship; and it’s just such an enjoyable and joyful place to be!”


European Olympic Committees and athletes gives ‘full support’ to Olympic Agenda 2020 – and welcome President Bach at EOC General Assembly in Baku

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European Olympic Committees and athletes gives ‘full support’ to Olympic Agenda 2020 – and welcome President Bach at EOC General Assembly in Baku



European Olympic Committees and athletes gives ‘full support’ to Olympic Agenda 2020 – and welcome President Bach at EOC General Assembly in Baku
22/11/2014
EOC delegates today unanimously passed a resolution publically declaring ‘that they fully support Agenda 2020’. In the resolution the EOC Athletes’ Commission also ‘pledge their full support for Olympic Agenda 2020.’
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach joined representatives of 49 European NOCs in Baku this week for the 43rd General Assembly, outlining plans for Olympic Agenda 2020, the strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement that will be debated and agreed in Monaco, December 8th and 9th.

The Azerbaijan capital is preparing to host the European Games in June next year. Baku 2015 will feature more than 6,000 athletes from the NOCs of Europe in 17 days of competition.

Complementing the EOC, President Bach said ‘the best illustration of the vitality and energy of the EOC is the first ever European Games. I am confident of their success.  You have the strong support from the Government , the national sports movement as well as the enthusiasm of the people.’

During the General Assembly, the President was awarded the EOC’s highest award the Order of Merit.

Accompanied by EOC President Patrick Hickey and IOC Director of NOC Relations Pere Miro, President Bach also met with President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev.  The two leaders discussed Olympic Agenda 2020 and the important role that sport can play in the positive development of society.  President Aliyev outlined his plans for the development of the nation including how sport will be used in this transformation.

On Thursday, President Bach was awarded an Honorary Doctor’s Degree by the Azerbaijan State Academy of Physical Training and Sports.

Friday, 21 November 2014

Second Tokyo 2020 Project Review comes to a close

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Second Tokyo 2020 Project Review comes to a close



Second Tokyo 2020 Project Review comes to a close
©TOKYO 2020 - Shugo TAKEMI
19/11/2014
A little over a year after the election of Tokyo as the host city of the Olympic Games in 2020, an International Olympic Committee (IOC) delegation, led by the IOC’s Coordination Commission Chair John Coates and Deputy Chair Alex Gilady, has completed its second Project Review visit to the Japanese capital (18-19 November).
The delegation left Tokyo pleased with the advances being made in preparations, and was reassured with the progress of its venue master plan review, which is being conducted with a view to ensuring cost-effective investments for the Games and in the spirit of Olympic Agenda 2020, to make Tokyo 2020’s concept as sustainable as possible.
Speaking at the end of the meeting, John Coates said, “Tokyo continues to make solid progress on its road to 2020. Under the leadership of President Mori and with the support of its government partners and civil society, particularly in the form of its “best of Japan” Advisory Meeting, Tokyo 2020 is laying the foundations of outstanding Olympic Games for the athletes and the fans.”
He continued, “We were also reassured by the close working relationships that Tokyo has been building with the International Federations, and are confident that the venue master plan review will deliver even more sustainable Games in 2020.”
Tokyo 2020 continues to work on its venue master plan review, but in a manner consistent with the principles of Olympic Agenda 2020, support has been received from the relevant International Federations for Tokyo 2020 to investigate alternative locations for some venues. These decisions will need to be finalised with the appropriate Federations and receive the approval of the IOC Executive Board before being fully confirmed.
Yoshiro Mori, President of The Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games, said, “The second IOC –Tokyo 2020 Project Review was held over a two-day period, and I am delighted that together we were able to hold a series of intensive and extremely productive discussions. Our discussions included a wide range of items, including a review of the Games venue plans, the Games vision, personnel management and commercial matters. We are extremely grateful for the valuable advice offered by Chairman of the IOC Coordination Commission, Mr John Coates, and all members of the IOC delegation. We will of course be incorporating this advice into the formulation of our Games Foundation Plan.”
He continued, “I would like to reiterate my fullest assurance that all members of our All-Japan team, made up of representatives from a broad cross-section of Japanese society, are determined to exert our utmost efforts to ensure the delivery of successful 2020 Games.”
The project review visit included a short venue tour and meetings relating to the foundation process of Games planning, including Tokyo’s vision, governance, sport, people management, finance, engagement and legacy. In addition, it was announced during the meeting that Tokyo has signed the Marketing Plan Agreement and is now open for business. The IOC delegation rounded off its visit to Japan by attending an event run by IOC TOP partner GE, which looked at how to deliver the best legacy possible for the Games and for Japan.
The Project Review meetings for Tokyo 2020 are technical visits to the future host city, which are attended by the Coordination Commission Chair and Deputy Chair and serve as interim updates between full Coordination Commission visits. Other Commission members, where appropriate, the Olympic Games Executive Director and members of the IOC administration also participate in Project Review meetings.

APEC Targets Doubling of Renewable Energy

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Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 21 November 2014 – APEC member economies, the world’s largest producers and consumers of energy, are advancing new measures to double the share of renewable energy in the region within 15 years to keep pace with rising demand and ease the environmental impact of economic development across the Asia-Pacific.
Actions ranging from technical cooperation to facilitate solar photovoltaic rooftop installation to support for low carbon heating system development and renewable energy grid integration were taken forward during a just concluded week-long assembly of APEC energy officials in Port Moresby, on the heels of the APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting and subsequent bilateral meeting between China and the United States that announced their landmark emissions deal. 
“Economic development and increasing consumption in emerging Asia-Pacific markets will intensify pressure on global energy supplies through the coming decades, even as large, newly accessible reserves come online,” said Nixon Duban, Petroleum and Energy Minister of Papua New Guinea, which began exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) from a new USD19 billion Exxon Mobile project earlier this year. 
“The only way we are going to satisfy demand needed to keep our diverse economies moving is by improving the development and use of LNG and conventional fossil fuels while taking further steps to diversify the region’s energy mix,” Duban explained. “All of us in APEC want to see renewables play a larger role in production and consumption in the region and we are working closely to address cost and technical bandwidth issues to help make this happen.”  
As APEC economies implement their ground-breaking commitment to reduce tariffs on 54 “environmental goods” to five per cent or less by the end of 2015, improving the accessibility of products such as solar panels and wind turbines, emphasis is turning to the fostering of international standards and best practices that are vital to the mainstream application of renewable technologies. A new gap assessment paper is also being prepared. 
The APEC Low Carbon Model Town initiative, which promotes low carbon urban design based on real-world feasibility testing, is being expanded in-line with these efforts. Renewable energy-powered buildings and community energy management systems that support solar energy and electric vehicle use are among the proposed measures for adoption in San Borja, Peru, a new participant in the initiative in 2014, which could help to cut its emissions by up to 28 per cent within seven years.  
APEC economies this week confirmed Bintung City, in North Sulawesi, Indonesia, as the fifth APEC Low Carbon Model Town whose ranks also include Yujiapu on the outskirts of Tianjin, China; Samui Island, Thailand; and Da Nang, Viet Nam. The initiative was launched by APEC in 2010. 
“Renewables still account for a modest proportion of energy supplies across the APEC region but there is opportunity for growth,” said Dr Phyllis Yoshida, Lead Shepherd of the APEC Energy Working Group. “Technological advancements are making renewables more economically viable and increasing the incentives for governments to put in place policies that remove barriers to, and speed up the employment of, these clean, sustainable energy resources.”  
Renewables constitute about 10 per cent of energy supplies across APEC economies. In September in Beijing, the region’s Energy Ministers committed to doubling this amount by 2030, from 2010 levels. Definitional issues related to this goal, bearing in mind different environment situations and concerns about the employment of certain kinds of renewable energy, are further challenges being addressed. 
A definition for the doubling was adopted this week that includes renewable energy generated by large hydroelectric plants, which APEC economies are collaborating on to make sure is sustainable, but does not include woodfuels, agricultural by-products and dung known as “traditional biomass.” Methodology for measuring progress towards this goal is still being clarified. Monitoring approaches are also being explored. 
“We are working to make renewables a cornerstone of energy development and taking on board new policy innovations to move this process forward,” concluded Dr Yoshida, who also serves as United States Deputy Assistant Secretary of Energy. “This isn’t just pie in the sky kind of stuff we’re dealing with but real, concrete steps to boost renewable energy’s contribution to powering economic growth and in ways that reduce emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change.” 
Collectively, APEC economies account for 55 per cent of global energy production and 60 per cent of total energy consumption. 
Issued by the APEC Energy Working Group

IOC, FC Barcelona teaming up in Africa

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IOC, FC Barcelona teaming up in Africa

IOC, FC Barcelona teaming up in Africa
©IOC/Arnaud Meylan
19/11/2014
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach welcomed Barcelona Football Club President Josep Maria Bartomeu i Floreta to the IOC headquarters in Lausanne earlier this week where the pair discussed the impressive reach and progress of the Olympafrica FutbolNet Cup programme.
Jointly run by the IOC, the FC Barcelona Foundation (FFCB) and the Olympafrica Foundation, the programme uses football as an educational tool to promote the values of sport, such as team-building, fair play and respect for others, to young people in Africa. In 2014 – the first year of the programme following a successful pilot project in 2013 – the Olympafrica FutbolNet Cup reached over 95,000 young people in 34 African nations. The programme is scheduled to continue through 2016 with a focus on the strengthening of the regional phase. As of next year, each of the 38 Olympafrica Centres will have the opportunity to participate in a local and regional tournament.

"At the IOC we want to bring the values of sport to all fields of society, across all borders, and to foster Olympism year-round,” said IOC President Bach. “Through this partnership with the FC Barcelona Foundation, we are providing almost 100,000 young people throughout Africa with the opportunity to practise sport and be empowered thanks to the educational programme which promotes Olympic values such as friendship, excellence and respect. I thank FC Barcelona for this collaboration and their commitment to place sport at the service of humankind.”

In addition to providing access to sport and education, the programme is also set to donate up to 12,000 t-shirts, 12,000 bibs and 3,000 footballs to the 38 Olympafrica Centres.
The two organisations first signed an MoU on 17 April 2013 aimed at supporting joint actions in the area of development through sport and the promotion of the Olympic values. In December 2013 a new agreement was signed. The two sports organisations made a commitment to strengthen the Olympafrica Foundation’s existing football programme on offer in community sports centres to young people throughout Africa, adding an educational aspect thanks to the implementation of the FFCB’s FutbolNet method. FutbolNet’s objective is to pass on the positive values of sport to the young participants through the pleasure of playing and practising football.
Olympafrica, which was initiated by the IOC, aims to further social development through sport and promote the creation of small-scale sports and socio-educational centres in African countries, in collaboration with National Olympic Committees and local communities, in order to encourage and assist the development of talented youngsters through local training programmes. The idea for such an initiative was first launched in 1988 to enable developing countries to benefit fully from the positive impact of Olympism. Today, the Olympafrica programme offers a wide range of sporting, social and educational activities for young people and communities in 38 centres across 34 African countries.  
Find out more about the IOC’s development through sport activities

Find out more about the FC Barcelona Foundation



Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Olympic Agenda 2020: Strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement unveiled

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Olympic Agenda 2020: Strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement unveiled

Olympic Agenda 2020: Strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement unveiled
©IOC / Ian Jones
18/11/2014
IOC President says “Now is the time for change”
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach today revealed the 40 proposals that make up Olympic Agenda 2020, a strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement, which will be discussed and voted on by the full IOC membership at the 127th IOC Session this 8 and 9 December in Monaco.
During the public launch of the recommendations at The Olympic Museum in Lausanne, President Bach called the 20+20 proposals “the culmination of a year of open, transparent and widespread debate and discussion, which had already begun in mid-2013.”
“These 40 recommendations are like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle,” he added. “When you put them together, a picture emerges that shows the IOC safeguarding the uniqueness of the Olympic Games and strengthening sport in society.”
The IOC President first presented the recommendations to a round table of athletes, many of whom actively contributed to the Olympic Agenda 2020 process. The discussion included a number of medal-winning Olympians.*
Some of the key areas addressed by the recommendations are:
- Changes to the bidding process (Recommendation 1), with a new philosophy to invite potential candidate cities to present a project that fits their sporting, economic, social and environmental long-term planning needs. Shaping it more as an invitation and introducing an “invitation phase” – during which cities considering a bid will be advised about the opportunities this new procedure offers, in particular in regard to legacy and sustainability. The organisation of sports and events outside the host city and even, in exceptional cases, outside the host country could also be allowed, always respecting the integrity of the Olympic Village.

- Reducing costs for bidding (Recommendation 3), by decreasing the number of presentations that are allowed and providing a significant financial contribution from the IOC. At the same time emphasising that the sustainability of a bid must be taken into consideration right from the beginning.

- Move from a sport-based to an event-based programme (Recommendation10). Create limits on accreditation for athletes, coaches and other athlete support staff to ensure that the Games do not grow bigger. Allowing more than 28 sports to be on the programme while respecting these limits.

- Strengthen the 6th Fundamental Principle of Olympism (Recommendation 14). The IOC to include non-discrimination on sexual orientation in the 6th Fundamental Principle of Olympism in the Olympic Charter.

- Launch of an Olympic TV Channel (Recommendation 19) to provide a platform for sports and athletes beyond the Olympic Games period, 365 days a year. To fully connect with the digital age and connect with young people on their terms. It will be a worldwide platform and an opportunity to spread Olympic values as well as highlighting the IOC’s many cultural and humanitarian projects. Candidate cities may also be given exposure during the bidding phase.

- Adapting and further strengthening the principles of good governance and ethics to changing demands. Ensuring compliance with the Basic Universal Principles of Good Governance (Recommendation 27) and transparency of accounts (Recommendation 29), with the IOC’s financial statements to be prepared and audited according to the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) even when not legally required. Strengthening the independence of the IOC Ethics Commission (Recommendation 30), with the chair and members of the Commission to be elected by the IOC Session. The IOC will also create the position of compliance officer (Recommendation 31) to advise IOC members, staff, NOCs and IFs with regard to compliance.
The athletes remain at the centre of all 40 of the proposals, with the protection of the clean athletes being at the heart of the IOC’s philosophy. The central importance of the “athletes’ experience” will be introduced into the evaluation criteria with no compromise on the field of play for athletes, and the paramount importance of the Olympic Village.
Read Olympic Agenda 2020: 20+20 Recommendations here.
Read Olympic Agenda 2020: Context and Background here.

“Over the past year many people have asked me why there is a desire to make changes. After all, they say, the Olympic Games, the IOC, and the Olympic Movement have enjoyed many successes and we are in a very good position,” said President Bach. “My answer is that we are now in the position to drive change ourselves rather than being driven. We have to take leadership with Olympic Agenda 2020. We have the opportunity, and we must seize the moment – now is the time for change.”
There is no change proposed to the age limit of 70 for IOC members. In a limited number of cases (five), a one-time extension of a member’s term of office may be made for a maximum of four years (Recommendation 37). There is no proposal to allow individual members to visit candidate cities, but there is a proposal that will lead to more in-depth information and discussion about the strengths, weaknesses, risks and opportunities of candidate cities (Recommendation 2).
The 40 recommendations were finalised by the IOC Executive Board in October following presentations from the chairs of the 14 Working Groups that were set up to refine the proposals earlier this year. In addition to members of the Olympic Movement, including National Olympic Committees, International Federations, TOP sponsors and athletes, the Working Groups consisted of experts from civil society such as the United Nations, Google/YouTube, Transparency International, the Clinton Foundation, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the World Bank. 
Strong interest from across the Olympic Movement has been shown in Olympic Agenda 2020. Discussions at the 126th IOC Session in Sochi, for example, included a total of 211 interventions by the IOC members. The proposals were also debated by the IOC Commissions and at two Olympic Summits. The Summits brought together the presidents of the major stakeholders of the Olympic Movement.
The inclusive and transparent Olympic Agenda 2020 process was initiated by President Bach over a year ago. His call for contributions resulted in more than 40,000 submissions and produced 1,200 concrete ideas.
*The athletes who attended the round table were:
Claudia Bokel – Germany – Fencing – Olympic silver medallist; IOC member; Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission
Vincent Defrasne – France – Biathlon – Olympic gold medallist and two-time bronze medallist; Youth Olympic Games (YOG) Athlete Role Model
Susana Feitor – Portugal – Racewalking – Competed in five editions of the Olympic Games; Athletes’ Commission and IOC Athletes’ Career Programme Outreach trainer
Jessica Fox – Australia – Canoeing – Olympic silver medallist; YOG gold medallist; YOG Young Ambassador
Jade Jones – Great Britain – Taekwondo – Olympic gold medallist; YOG gold medallist
Stéphane Lambiel – Switzerland – Figure skating – silver medallist; YOG Athlete Role Model; Olympic silver medallist
Marsha Marescia – South Africa – Hockey – Three-time Olympian
Kaveh Mehrabi – Iran – Badminton – Olympian at the 2008 Beijing Games – WADA Athlete Committee
Koji Murofushi – Japan – Hammer throw – Olympic gold and silver medallist; Sports Director, Tokyo 2020
Maria Höfl-Riesch – Germany – Skiing – Three-time Olympic gold medallist and silver medallist
Jean-Michel Saive – Belgium – Table tennis – Seven-time Olympian; Chair, EOC Athletes’ Commission
QUOTES FROM MEMBERS OF THE OLYMPIC MOVEMENT:
“Supporting clean sport and clean athletes is what the IOC and WADA are all about. The IOC has shown itself time and again ready to invest in making Olympic sport credible, and these proposals are an important pillar in that fight. Part of the recommendations for Olympic Agenda 2020 will see a continued and renewed investment to protect sport and the athletes. Sports fans must be able to believe in the sporting events they watch if our Movement and the good it can do are to have a future.”
Craig Reedie, IOC Vice-President and WADA Chairman
“We have to find a way of being able to introduce new sports that are relevant to young people.
I was very impressed by the new sports presented at the Sports Lab at the Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing in the summer, and particularly the culture of those athletes taking part. We just have to be flexible to include new events – and I think the recommendations contained in Olympic Agenda 2020 will help us to do that.
Above all, for me the credibility of sport remains crucial to the future of the Olympic Movement. It is good to see us investing in protecting athletes who play fair when it comes to doping, and particularly when it comes to match-fixing and manipulation.”
John Coates, IOC Vice-President
“Thirty years ago, I became the first Moroccan athlete to win a gold medal at the Olympic Games. The celebrations in my home country underlined to me the important role that sport and the Olympic Games play in people’s lives. It is therefore essential for me that, as a Movement, we continue to evolve and stay relevant for the athletes and the watching world. This is why I fully endorse the outcomes of Olympic Agenda 2020 and am looking forward to seeing how the Olympic Games can benefit from our final decisions.”
Nawal El Moutawakel, IOC Vice-President and Chair of the IOC Coordination Commission for Rio 2016
“Olympic Agenda 2020 has seen stakeholders from all around the world and from very many different backgrounds contributing ideas that will make our Movement stronger in the future. 
The Olympic Games continue to push new boundaries and to appeal to many different audiences of sports fans around the world. We must continue to do this. The power of the Olympic ideal is that it reflects universal ideas in different ways around the world. Olympic Agenda 2020 will build on our success.”
Zaiqing Yu, IOC Vice-President and ANOC Vice-President
“These reforms will shape the future development of the Olympic Movement so that Olympic sport can continue to connect with people around the world. At the ANOC General Assembly in Bangkok early this month, we gave unanimous backing to Olympic Agenda 2020. As the President of the IOC said, the time to change is when you are successful and it is indeed a pleasure to see the launch of these reforms, which will ensure we remain relevant to all generations around the world. We must continue to appeal to different cultures and populations with a unifying message based on the Olympic values.”
Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, IOC Member, ANOC and OCA President, Chair of the IOC Olympic Solidarity Commission
“The International Federations have been involved every step of the way in the creation of these recommendations, which lay out a comprehensive plan for the future of Olympic sport.
Through the Working Groups and through our representatives in the IOC, we have been able to help shape these proposals, which, if accepted, will lead to greater flexibility and help maintain the relevance of Olympic sport, particularly among young people.”
Francesco Ricci Bitti, ITF President and ASOIF President
“For winter sports, it is imperative that the Olympic Winter Games remain strictly for sports on snow and ice. We need to continue to spread their popularity and ensure that more cities come forward with bids that work for them and that the Olympic Games remain attractive around the world.
There has to be a place for a wide range of concepts for the Games, and the proposals contained in Olympic Agenda 2020 are designed to encourage more cities with different ideas on the size and scope of the Games to come forward. The IOC is listening and wants the bidding process to help cities and governments to propose Games that appeal to their citizens.”
Gian-Franco Kasper, IOC member, FIS President and AIOWF President
“I am extremely pleased to see the recommendation in Olympic Agenda 2020 to include sexual preference in the Fundamental Principles of the Olympic Charter. This recommendation by the IOC sends a strong and powerful signal to all athletes, and to the world at large, of our message of absolute non-discrimination. Including sexual orientation reaffirms that Olympic sport stands for fundamental values, and hopefully ensures that each and every athlete attending the Olympic Games feels inclusion and acceptance. Hopefully this amendment to the Charter will also send a message of tolerance and acceptance to the rest of the world.”
Angela Ruggiero, IOC member, IOC Athletes’ Commission member, 4 Olympic medals (1 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze)
“The recommendations in Olympic Agenda 2020 are designed to change the bidding process in a positive way. I think it is important to bring the Olympic Winter Games especially back to their roots, where the organisers are creating genuine winter festivals and where the inhabitants of the host city are as important as the athletes.
I think it is a step forward that the bidding cities will have the chance to focus on Games that work in the local context – socially, economically and environmentally. I also think it is positive that the IOC will encourage the re-use of venues, temporary venues, and even the use of some venues in other regions and countries. This will lower the costs, which will hopefully make staging the Games more attractive for more countries.”
Ole Einar Bjørndalen, IOC member and most medalled Winter Olympian, 13 Olympic medals (8 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze)

Monday, 17 November 2014

Tony Nash on true sportsmanship

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.


Tony Nash on true sportsmanship



14/11/2014
An Olympic champion in the two-man bobsleigh at Innsbruck 1964, Tony Nash has a unique story to tell.
Bobsleigh dates back to the late 19th century and owes its existence to British visitors to the Swiss resort of St Moritz, whose penchant for hurtling down the town’s roads in sleds eventually led to the creation of the famous Cresta Run. Yet despite the country’s influential role in the sport’s beginnings, it was not until 1964 that Great Britain won an Olympic bobsleigh gold, courtesy of Tony Nash and Robin Dixon, who also took the two-man world title that year and repeated the feat in 1965. Since then, however, the British have failed to win another Olympic gold in a sport they invented.
It was in the fabled St Moritz, in the heart of the canton of Graubünden, that Dixon, an accomplished sprinter in the late 1950s who has since inherited the title of Lord Glentoran, became acquainted with the sport. For his part, Nash went into bobsleighing after his father objected to him becoming a racing driver.
Nash and Dixon teamed up in 1960 in a four-man bob driven by Henry Taylor, who was also competing in Formula One at the time. When Taylor suffered an injury after crashing his Cooper Climax in a race, Nash took over as the driver, with he and Dixon deciding to go it alone as a two-man team.
The most enthusiastic of amateurs, they carried their equipment around the Alps in an old Land Rover. It was not long, however, before they began to make a name for themselves on the bobsleigh circuit, befriending Eugenio Monti and his all-conquering Italians, who dominated the sport at the time and helped the British duo improve their skills. And improve they did, winning an impressive bronze at the 1963 World Championships, held on the Igls track in Innsbruck (AUT), the venue for the following year’s Olympic competition.
On returning to Innsbruck in February 1964, Nash and Dixon went second fastest in GBR 1 in the first two runs, their combined time giving them the overall lead. After going third fastest on the third run, they found that a bolt on the rear axle of their sled had sheared off and that they did not have a spare. The selfless Monti came to their aid, however, lending them a bolt after he had completed his own run.
Nash and Dixon went on to record the quickest time in the fourth and final leg and take gold by 0.12 seconds from Sergio Zardini and Romana Bonagura in Italy 2, with Monti and Sregio Siorpaes 0.73 seconds behind in third in Italy 1. “Nash didn’t win the gold medal because I gave him a bolt. He won because he was the fastest,” said Monti, who received the inaugural Pierre de Coubertin Medal that year for his wonderful display of sportsmanship.