2020 Games postponement signals
growing power shift from IOC to athletes
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[March 31, 2020]
By Ossian Shine, Amy Tennery and Makini Brice
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tweeting
from her Toronto couch two weeks ago, six-time Olympian Hayley
Wickenheiser had two words for the International Olympic Committee,
which had yet to postpone the Tokyo Summer Games amid the
coronavirus pandemic: "Insensitive and irresponsible."
Days later the IOC acquiesced, delaying the Olympics until July 2021
and sparking what some say could be a permanent shift in power away
from the hierarchical governing body to athletes.
As the coronavirus pandemic swept the globe, sponsors and
broadcasters with millions of dollars on the line stayed mostly
silent about the timing of the Tokyo Olympic Games, scheduled to
open in July. Sports federations simply said they would take their
lead from the IOC. The vast majority of nations bided their time.
For exasperated Wickenheiser, 41, something had to give.
"I think the IOC insisting this will move ahead, with such
conviction, is insensitive and irresponsible given the state of
humanity," she tweeted.
Wickenheiser, a Canadian ice hockey gold medalist and
doctor-in-training who also competed in softball in the 2000 Sydney
Summer Games, told Reuters that she could not stay silent.
"(Athletes) were the first voices to really alert the world to how
tone deaf the IOC was being," she said.
As a result, the IOC narrative was "turned on its head" Johannes
Herber, CEO at Athleten Deutschland said.
"The fact that the IOC and Japan decided to postpone has a lot to do
with the fact that athletes spoke out and clearly told their
stories. It somehow made it real," he said.
"Formally, nothing has changed and athletes have formally no more
power than before. But the power they have through social media to
form public opinion was clearly demonstrated."
Some in the IOC acknowledge athlete power was key in this
unprecedented postponement, signaling a challenge to the body's
supremacy.
"I know for a fact that some colleagues messaged the president
urging him to postpone because they were under a lot of pressure
back home both from the athletes, and in some cases governments,"
one IOC member, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters.
SPEAKING UP AROUND THE WORLD
Wickenheiser was not the only dissenting voice.
"Our athletes played a critical role in our decision to request the
postponement of the 2020 Games," said Isabelle McLemore, a
spokeswoman for USA Swimming, which was among the early groups to
call for a delay.
[to top of second column] |
Team Canada women's ice hockey player and Canadian flag bearer
Hayley Wickenheiser poses in front of the Olympic rings at Bolshoy
Ice Dome ahead of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics February 3, 2014.
REUTERS/Mark Blinch/File Photo
Erik Kynard, a high-jumper who won a silver medal in the 2012
Olympic games, said he had called for the postponement of the
Olympics in media interviews and in his comments to the USA Track
and Field board, of which he is a member.
"The voices of the athletes were always there. It's just that when
you're up on a pedestal, it's difficult to hear," said Kynard, whose
grandfather has the virus.
Michelle Carter, an Olympic gold medal-winning shot putter and
member of the USA Track and Field board, said the health and safety
of their sports' officials - many of whom are older than 70 - as
well as their family members and fans was a motivating factor.
"We're just now really realizing the power that our voice has, that
what we say matters more than what we think," Carter said.
American Emma Coburn, who took bronze in the 3,000-metre steeple at
Rio, said that while there was no "war" with the IOC, the incident
showed athletes' ability "to speak up and say what they wanted."
"In my mind it wasn't athletes versus IOC; it wasn’t pitted like
that. It was, 'as athletes this is how we feel, we’re communicating
it to you and we feel like it’s your job to not only listen to what
we want but to what is the safest choice'," said Coburn, who hopes
to compete in Tokyo next year.
A PERMANENT SHIFT?
Rob Koehler, head of the Global Athlete movement which aims to
empower athletes, told Reuters the IOC should brace itself for more
pressure, and a new order of things.
"In general, athletes are realizing that they have the power, or can
have the power," he said. "The athletes used to be told, 'that's
your sandbox, you go and play in it, we'll look after the governance
of sport.
"There have been some significant moments over the last four years
which have led to athletes being frustrated and realize their voices
aren't being listened to."
For Wickenheiser, there is no turning back: "Athletes in the world
need to continue to use their platforms to create change and realize
the power they have."
(Additional reporting by: Karolos Grohmann in Athens; Gabrielle
Tetrault-Farber in Moscow; Makini Brice in Washington; Brian
Homewood in Lausanne; Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; Editing
by Ossian Shine, Leela de Kretser; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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