Menu
Olympics

Olympic Leaders Back Int'l Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach's Reforms

Moving forward on IOC President Thomas Bach's reform process, Olympic leaders "backed his proposals Saturday for setting up an Olympic television channel, reshaping the bid city procedure, and adding more flexibility to the sports program," according to the AP. Bach "convened a summit of 16 key IOC and sports officials in Lausanne, Switzerland, to press ahead with Olympic Agenda 2020, his strategic blueprint for the future." The leaders "supported the platform of changes" that Bach will put to a vote at a special IOC session in Monaco from Dec. 8-9. Creation of an Olympic TV channel "that would promote Olympic sports in the years between the games and help connect with younger people is one of Bach's main projects." The IOC said in a statement that the officials at Saturday's meeting backed the idea, "recognizing the potential to greatly increase the presence of sports and the promotion of the Olympic values year round and worldwide." Details of the project have yet to be announced, although the IOC has said it would act as a "curator or moderator" to develop digital content, using the National Geographic Channel as a model. Sports federations, national Olympic committees, broadcasters, and sponsors "would be asked to take part." The summit "also produced agreement on a new procedure for cities bidding to host the Olympics." The IOC said the new process would give "more flexibility" to bid cities, allowing them to focus from the start on the long-term benefits the games can bring to the area and how the Olympics could "fit into their development plans." The IOC and sports federations should also be "flexible and open to reasonable adaptation" to the bid concept (AP, 7/20). The EVENING HERALD reported four European National Olympic Committees have called on the IOC "for a thorough revision of the Olympic bidding process." In a joint paper released, the national committees of Austria, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland asked the IOC for "more support in bidding, more certainty in process, more partnership in risk, more flexibility in scale." All four nations "backtracked recently from bidding plans to host the 2022 Winter Olympics" or the 2028 Olympic Games (EVENING HERALD, 7/16).

SBJ Morning Buzzcast: May 9, 2024

WNBA regular season games to be available on Disney+; Candace Parker's new role at Adidas; Rory McIlroy will not return to PGA Tour Policy Board and Theo Epstein's role with the PGA Tour moving forward.

Phoenix Mercury/NBC’s Cindy Brunson, NBA Media Deal, Network Upfronts

On this week’s pod, SBJ’s Austin Karp chats with SBJ NBA writer Tom Friend about the pending NBA media Deal. Cindy Brunson of NBC and Phoenix Mercury is our Big Get this week. The sports broadcasting pioneer talks the upcoming WNBA season. Later in the show, SBJ media writer Mollie Cahillane gets us set for the upcoming network upfronts.

SBJ I Factor: Molly Mazzolini

SBJ I Factor features an interview with Molly Mazzolini. Elevate's Senior Operating Advisor – Design + Strategic Alliances chats with SBJ’s Ross Nethery about the power of taking chances. Mazzolini is a member of the SBJ Game Changers Class of 2016. She shares stories of her career including co-founding sports design consultancy Infinite Scale career journey and how a chance encounter while working at a stationery store launched her career in the sports industry. SBJ I Factor is a monthly podcast offering interviews with sports executives who have been recipients of one of the magazine’s awards.

Shareable URL copied to clipboard!

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Global/Issues/2014/07/21/Olympics/IOC-reforms.aspx

Sorry, something went wrong with the copy but here is the link for you.

https://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/Global/Issues/2014/07/21/Olympics/IOC-reforms.aspx

CLOSE