Swimming-Top swimmers form alliance to push for change and more money
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[June 08, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Former Olympic
champion Matt Biondi and a list of top swimmers announced an
alliance on Tuesday to push for more say in how the sport is run and
financial rewards for competing at global events like the Olympics.
The 10-member board of the International Swimmers' Alliance includes
Hungary's Katinka Hosszu, Ranomi Kromowidjojo of the Netherlands and
South African Chad Le Clos -- all Olympic gold medallists.
The United States' 11-times Olympic medallist and former world
record holder Biondi will be chairman.
"World-class swimmers have been under-represented and, in turn,
exploited by the Olympic business model," the Alliance said on its
website
http://www.international
swimmersalliance.org.
It said 120 world class swimmers from 31 countries had signed up.
The announcement follows the election last Saturday of Kuwaiti
Husain Al-Musallam as president of aquatics world governing body
FINA.
It comes also in the run-up to the U.S. Olympic trials in Omaha this
weekend and less then two months before the Tokyo Games starting on
July 23.
Swimming is the major sport for the first week of every Games.
The non-profit Alliance said in a statement that it would be an
independent organization established for athletes and by athletes "to
fight for swimmers' rights and provide them with an independent global
voice."
It added that its goal was to "improve personal and economic
opportunities for all elite swimmers by elevating the sport into the
modern era."
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The Alliance hoped for "positive
dialogue" with the IOC and FINA but would hold accountable those not
acting in athletes' best interests.
"Swimmers receive no compensation for competing either at the
Olympics or World Championships," it observed.
The Alliance said it also wanted the establishment and maintenance
of pension and health insurance plans and other benefits.
"Very little has changed in the business structure of professional
swimming since Tom Jager and I were the first true professional
swimmers in America three decades ago. This fact is not lost on
today's top swimmers," said Biondi.
The 55-year-old, who competed in the 1984, 1988 and 1992 Olympics,
fought a losing battle some 30 years ago to transform the sport and
is now closely involved with the professional International Swimming
League (ISL).
The Alliance will also have a strategic partnership with Global
Athlete, an athlete-led movement that aims to inspire change in
world sport.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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