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			Angeles throws down gauntlet to Paris in 2024 hosting battle 
			
		 
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			 [May 13, 2017] 
			By Steve Keating 
			 
			LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Los Angeles 
			2024 made a final pitch to the International Olympic Committee's 
			Evaluation Commission on Friday and now will wait and see if they 
			hit a home run to win the right to host the Summer Games for a third 
			time. 
			 
			Paris, the only other city in the running for the 2024 Olympics, 
			will get their chance to showcase their bid next week but LA threw 
			down the gauntlet to the French capital with a plan that commission 
			leader Patrick Baumann said had no major risks and venues that he 
			gushed as "mind-blowing". 
			 
			"Los Angeles is already a great Olympic city but after these three 
			days we now realize that was an understatement," Baumann told 
			reporters. "This visit has certainly confirmed our opinion that Los 
			Angeles has developed an excellent proposal. 
			 
			"Their vision and concept have embraced the direction provided by 
			the Olympic Agenda 2020 with the extensive use of existing 
			facilities in particular. 
			 
			"It goes from spectacular venues, to impressive venues to 
			mind-blowing venues. 
			 
			"It was very positive because we were able to see them." 
			
			
			  
			
			The Evaluation commission was treated to the full LA experience 
			during a whirlwind visit that included a glitzy, celebrity packed 
			party at the home of Los Angeles bid chief Casey Wasserman, playing 
			some basketball at the Staples Center and hitting the Santa Monica 
			beach along with a tour of the Memorial Coliseum that anchored the 
			1932 and 1984 Summer Games and will be a centerpiece again should LA 
			get the 2024 Olympics. 
			 
			There was no need for commission members to close their eyes and 
			imagine what a 2024 Los Angeles Olympics might look like with the 
			bid built around already existing world class facilities. 
			 
			In fact, the LA proposal that is budgeted for a modest $5.3 billion, 
			calls for no new venue construction. 
			 
			THORNY ISSUES 
			 
			The plan, which the commission termed "well-developed", ticks many 
			of the boxes on the IOC's revolutionary Agenda 2020 which was 
			developed to modernize the way the Olympics does business. 
			 
			The bid, however, was not without a few thorny issues, including 
			concerns over President Donald Trump's proposed travel restrictions 
			on some nations, which could prevent Olympic athletes from gaining 
			entry and competing in the United States. 
			
			
			  
			
			
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			International Olympic Committee Evaluation Commission Chairman 
			Patrick Baumann holds a final news conference following meetings and 
			tours as part of LA 2024's bid for the Summer 2024 Olympic Games in 
			Los Angeles, California, U.S., May 12, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake 
            
			  
            A city that is as famous for its gridlock as for sun 
			and surf, the commission also got a first-hand look at LA's 
			notorious freeway system. 
			 
			"There is still some work to be done, not everything can happen 
			overnight but we think there are excellent bases here," said 
			Baumann, whose commission will present their report to the public 
			and IOC members in July. 
			 
			LA2024 and Paris will have two more major opportunities to showcase 
			their bids when they make presentations to the IOC at the Lausanne 
			headquarters in July followed by the all-important final 
			presentation at a Congress in Lima, Peru ahead of the Sept. 13 vote. 
			 
			Adding intrigue to the bidding process is the possibility of the IOC 
			awarding the 2024 and 2028 Summer Games in Lima. 
			 
			Both bids have insisted they are interested only in the 2024 Games 
			but Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti has refused to shut the door on 
			taking on the 2028 Olympics should Paris come out on top for 2024. 
			 
			"Any city would have to look at the terms if the rules change, what 
			a 2028 award means," said Garcetti. "We'll listen if the rules 
			change. 
			 
			"But I'd love to go to Paris in 2028 and see my friends; I think it 
			would be great Olympics." 
			 
			(Editing by Ken Ferris) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All 
			rights reserved.] 
			Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights 
			reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten 
			or redistributed. 
			
			
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