| 'Arms 
			race' for medals too rich for Australia 
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			 [August 01, 2018] 
			SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian 
			sporting success would no longer be measured solely by Olympic 
			medals and world titles with the country acknowledging that it could 
			not compete financially with larger countries. 
			The Australian Sports Commission, which has been rebranded as Sport 
			Australia, released its national strategy for the next 12 years -- 
			Sport 2030 -- on Wednesday and recognized they had been slipping 
			behind countries since the turn of the century.
 "High performance sport has become an ultra-competitive arms race 
			where countries pour hundreds of millions of dollars into elite 
			programs aimed at landing gold medals and pushing nations higher up 
			the Olympic medal table," the report said.
 
 "Since the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Australia's international sporting 
			performance has been in decline with a decrease in both medals and 
			medalists.
 
 "While we'll never stop striving to be the best in the world in as 
			many sports as possible, our aspirations must acknowledge that 
			success in high performance sport is correlated to investment and we 
			should measure our performance using more than just the medal table.
 
 "The measurement of success must now also include the impact of 
			athletes as role models, their engagement with the community, and 
			delivering a respected system."
 
 Australia has often defined itself by its relative sporting success 
			on the global stage. At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the country won a 
			national record 58 medals and finished fourth on the table behind 
			the United States, Russia and China.
 
			
			 
			That tally has slowly decreased at every Games since, with the team 
			winning just 29 medals at Rio in 2016 and finishing 10th on the 
			table.
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            The ASC is the main sports funding body in the country but had been 
			involved in a public battle with the independent Australian Olympic 
			Committee after the Rio Games.
 One of the criticisms of the ASC's "Winning Edge" strategy, 
			implemented after the London games in 2012, was that it targeted 
			elite sports at the cost of grassroots and community sports.
 
 The new policy will put greater focus on the lower levels of sports 
			in an effort to get the country more active.
 
 
             
			The AOC gave lukewarm support to the new plan but encouraged the 
			government to continue funding both sectors.
 
 "We support the plan's insight that success in high performance 
			sport is correlated to investment," AOC chief executive Matt Carroll 
			said in a statement.
 
 "This investment is not just about medals but outcomes that inspire 
			young Australians to take up sport and be the best they can.
 
 "An appropriately funded high performance and participation 
			environment will return the dividend the government is seeking."
 
 (Reporting by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
 
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