No
room for Australia, New Zealand in Asian Games: OCA chief
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[September 19, 2017]
ASHKABAT (Reuters) - The
influential head of the Olympic Council of Asia has dashed hopes
that athletes from Oceania nations, including Australia and New
Zealand, might be able to compete in the Asian Games from 2022.
Athletes from the two countries took part in the Asian Winter Games
as "guests" in Sapporo earlier this year and the Australian Olympic
Committee said talks were being held about extending the invitation
to the summer versions.
Nineteen Oceania nations are represented for the first time at the
ongoing Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games in Turkmenistan but OCA
President Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah said the Asian Games was
already too big.
"I hope at the next Indoor Games we will have the same experience
and Oceania will continue with us in the Indoor Games," he told a
news conference, adding that the Asian Beach Games might also be an
option for Oceania athletes.
"With the Asian Games we are already at 15,000 athletes and
officials and we cannot add to that number.
"In the Beach Games and Indoor Games we can continue to have our
coordination and cooperation, but for the Asian Games the number is
very high and we cannot have an Olympic Village with more than
15,000 people."
Next year's version of the quadrennial Asian Games, which is second
in size only to the Summer Olympics, takes place in Indonesia with
the 2022 edition scheduled for Hangzhou, China.
Australia has long entertained the idea of forging closer ties with
Asia in the hope of exposing their athletes to stiffer competition.
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John Coates, President of the Australian Olympic Committee (AOC),
listens to a question during a media conference in Sydney,
Australia, August 24, 2017. REUTERS/David Gray
In 2006, Australia's national soccer body ditched
Oceania to join the Asian Football Confederation but previous
attempts to compete at the Asian Games have failed.
They had the backing of China, who want tougher competition
especially for their swimmers, but not Sheikh Ahmad, who is also the
president of the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC)
representing more than 200 countries worldwide.
AOC President John Coates, another influential member of the
International Olympic Committee, said in Sapporo in February that
participating in the Asian Games would be "very good" for Australia.
"Discussions are underway and I believe there would be great
interest in the Asian Games amongst our member sports," he said.
"Particularly in sports where the Asian countries are strong such as
gymnastics, badminton and table tennis."
(Writing by Nick Mulvenney in Sydney, editing by Greg Stutchbury) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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