ISL says it will pay debts as suppliers threaten legal action
Send a link to a friend
[November 21, 2020]
By Alan Baldwin
(Reuters) - The professional
International Swimming League (ISL) has promised to honour financial
obligations and improve processes as some unpaid suppliers threaten
legal action.
The series, which ends its second season with finals in Budapest
this weekend featuring some of the world's top swimmers,
acknowledged the commercial difficulties in a statement.
"Our head-down approach to deliver Season 2020 may have caused
friction with some suppliers but we will honour all obligations,
which are less than 5% of last year’s overall expenditure," it said.
"Going forward, and before planning starts for Season Three, we will
need to close all outstanding issues from the past.
"We will adjust our internal organisation and processes to improve
our operational discipline to continue being a reliable partner to
all our suppliers."
London-based content agency LiveWire Sport (www.livewiresport.com)
said in a statement on Friday it had instructed lawyers to begin
legal proceedings against ISL over unpaid debts from 2019.
"We have been waiting over 10 months now for full payment for the
services provided to ISL for Season One. This is despite ISL
acknowledging the debt and saying they intend to pay the outstanding
amount," it added.
Jean-Francois Salessy, general manager of the Energy Standard team
and agent for French swimmer Florent Manaudou, resigned last week
with an open letter to the ISL's wealthy Ukrainian founder
Konstantin Grigorishin.
[to top of second column]
|
Adam Peaty of Britain
after winning the race. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth/File Photo
"ISL is a boat without governance but with only one shareholder and
generals without powers," he wrote in the letter sent to media.
"I no longer wish to be part of your fake movie."
The ISL said all sports rights holders had faced significant
challenges this year, with the COVID-19 pandemic disrupting
schedules.
Pools had been closed and meets cancelled and the ISL had taken on
"a huge additional financial commitment" in 2020 to support its
athletes in the run up to next year's Tokyo Olympics.
"We had hoped for meaningful revenues to come in but alongside the
impact of the pandemic our commercial operations have also failed
significantly with most projections not materialising," it said.
"The way we approach the market will need to be different going
forward."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Mark Potter)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|