Showing posts with label olympic bidding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label olympic bidding. Show all posts

Friday, July 28, 2017

This Day In History, 1984: The Los Angeles Olympics

Update, from Gamesbids:

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti Wednesday said that the negotiations are going so well with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that the city is most likely to accept the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games leaving rival bidder Paris unopposed to host in 2024.

Read the article here.

Original post:


It's down to two potential host cities for the 2024 Summer Games, LA and Paris, and it looks like the IOC might make an historic change. Rather than picking one winner and one loser, both cities will be announced as winners, with one hosting in 2024 and the other hosting in 2028. Stay tuned...

Thursday, February 23, 2017

2024: Los Angeles Or Paris?

Budapest has withdrawn its bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, leaving Los Angeles and Paris as the last two candidate cities. Los Angeles has hosted Summer Games twice before, in 1932 and 1984; Paris hosted the 1924 Summer Games. France has also hosted the Winter Games three times: in 1924 (Chamonix,) 1968 (Grenoble,) and 1992 (Albertville.) The U.S. also hosted the Summer Games in 1996 (Atlanta,) and the Winter Games four times: twice in Lake Placid, New York (1932 and 1980,) once in Squaw Valley, California (1960) and once in Salt Lake City (2002.)

Will the Olympics return to the U.S.? As I've said before, I think they will. Whether that's a good thing or not is debatable.

The 2024 host city will be announced by the IOC on September 13. You can keep track of everything related to Olympic bidding at a fun website called GamesBids.com

Days until the PyeongChang Games: 350

Saturday, September 17, 2016

We'll Know In A Year

Update: How many days until the next Olympics? Here's the countdown, from olympic.org:

PyeongChang Winter Games: 509 days
Tokyo Summer Games: 1405 days
Beijing Winter Games: 1965 days

Original post:
Does the following list ring a bell?

Sydney, Australia
Salt Lake City, USA
Athens, Greece
Turin, Italy
Beijing, China
Vancouver, Canada
London, England
Sochi, Russia
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

These are the cities/countries that have hosted the nine most recent Olympic games, starting with Sydney in 2000 and ending with the Rio games this summer. The reason the list interests me is that the "Let's give every continent a chance" pattern is about to change. After touring the globe from Europe to Asia to Australia to North and South America, we're looking at three Olympiads in a row in Asia:

2018 Winter Games: PyeongChang, South Korea
2020 Summer Games: Tokyo, Japan
2022 Winter Games: Beijing, China

This is not necessarily what the IOC would prefer, but more a reflection of the fact that several potential host cities either lost interest and dropped out or were not capable of hosting the games.

No Asian city is bidding for the 2024 Summer Games, which will return to either the U.S. or Europe, with Los Angeles, Paris, Rome and Budapest in the running as the "final four."

2024-logos-square
Will the games return to the U.S. after 22 years? In an article dated September 13 at gamesbids.com, a site that obsessively tracks all things related to Olympic bidding, Los Angeles and Paris appear to have the strongest bids, at least for the moment:

Rome, with no support from recently-elected Mayor Virginia Raggi, could bail out of the race later this month on its own accord should the mayor maintain her position and deny the campaign a needed endorsement ahead of an October 7 IOC deadline.  But even if Rome survives, low public support and economic headaches in Italy could have voters shying away from an Olympic partnership with the Eternal City.

Los Angeles enjoys stellar support, recently polled at about 88 per cent, and boasts that most of its venues are already constructed allowing the Golden State to organize a low-cost Games while focusing efforts on the athlete experience – and not construction.  The city has already hosted twice, but its last Games in 1984 has been widely considered to be the most recent profitable Games.

But will politics get in the way of Southern California dreams?  L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti said last month that the potential election of the seemingly xenophobic Donald Trump as U.S. President wouldn’t have an impact on the bid – however that will ultimately be the decision of IOC members.

Paris vows to bring the Games back to Europe and to a city with existing venues, event experience and a deep history with the Olympic movement.  But it won’t be easy – Paris has failed to convince the IOC to gather the world’s athletes in France on three previous bids.  The recent spate of terror attacks in France may also spook Olympic voters.

Budapest hopes to refresh the Olympic movement by leveraging some ready-built venues and offering new needed facilities to be constructed before the Games.  Organizers believe recent successful venue construction projects and a future fifteen year sports development plan will give the IOC the comfort it needs to partner with the Eastern European capital.  While Budapest is the only city of the four to have never had the opportunity to host – the relatively small population of Hungary may have IOC members questioning whether the plans are scalable and legacies sound. Read the entire article here.

The United States is the biggest market for the Olympic product and contributes the most revenue to IOC coffers. My guess is that after 22 years, and following the politically and financially motivated snub to Chicago in 2009, the Olympics will indeed be awarded to the American candidate city. Whether that's actually a good thing for L.A. or not remains to be seen. The announcement comes on September 13, 2017.  

Friday, July 31, 2015

Back To Beijing

Beijing Wins Bid To Become First City To Host Winter and Summer Olympic Games

Beijing was awarded the 2022 Winter Games, becoming the first city to host both Summer and Winter Games. Almaty, which may not have ever had a realistic chance, becomes the also-ran. The host city for 2024 will be announced in two years; will the U.S. be making a bid now that Boston has bailed? It looks like Los Angeles is the strongest possibility:

On Friday at the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) 128th Session in Kuala Lumpur IOC President Thomas Bach said that he has received firm commitments to bid from five national Olympic Committees – ” France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, USA,” he said.
Despite Boston’s demise, the USOC is under pressure to choose a replacement city to avoid any conflict with the IOC – yet they aren’t obligated to make any nomination on the September 15 deadline date.  But if the USOC does move forward, Los Angeles seems to be the most viable choice. 
Read more at gamesbids.

Los Angeles is one of the cities being considered for a 2024 Olympic bid (Logo Provided by LA2024)

Monday, July 27, 2015

Boston Says No

Image result for Olympics Boston
Image result for Olympics Boston



The big Olympic news this week was supposed to be the announcement of the site for 2022 Winter Games, which will happen on Friday. Before we get to that, however, America's candidate city for the 2024 games, Boston, made news of its own today, declaring that the city will not go forward with its bid. From bleacherreport.com:

Los Angeles, which finished second behind Boston in the competition to win the bid, "would be ready and willing to mount a bid on short notice," according to David Wharton of the Los Angeles Times.


The USOC originally chose Boston over Washington D.C., San Francisco and Los Angeles as the U.S. bid representative in January. Despite an initial push from politicians within the city, Boston residents soured on the Olympics almost from the moment it was announced. In April, an NPR poll found 50 percent of Boston-area residents were opposed to the city hosting the Olympics, with most citing the onerous burden on taxpayers. (Read the article here.) 

Boston's not the only city to have fallen out of love with the Olympics. There are only two cities, Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan, left in the running for 2022, after Stockholm, Oslo and a few others dropped out of the process, and according to gamesbids, a site that tracks every detail of the Olympic bidding process, New Zealand and Spain looked at preparing bids for 2026 but decided against it. Apparently the hassle, the disruption and most of all the exorbitant cost, are causing cities and countries to say No Thanks to hosting the games. 

Gamesbids says that Toronto, Rome, Hamburg and Budapest are among the cities considering 2024 bids; I wonder how many will still be in the running at announcement time in 2017. The 2022 announcement comes first, of course and will be made on Friday. Neither candidate city is ideal for the Winter Games and whichever city is awarded the bid, there's bound to be some grumbling. Maybe it's getting to be time to consider a permanent home for the Games. 

In the meantime, the Summer Games that are not being held in Chicago get underway in 375 days.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

2024 Olympics In The U.S.?

Friday morning update: Some interesting "inside baseball" history from the Washington Post. As with many things, it all comes down to money and politics.

For several years, relations between the USOC and the IOC were fraught, as the two sides bickered over finances. The global political climate in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks and the Iraq war isolated the United States within much of the IOC, and the number of U.S. supporters at IOC meetings seemed to shrink from year to year. Plus, when they were considering Olympic bids, many longtime IOC members couldn’t get over lingering distaste from the Atlanta Games, which suffered from transportation issues, security lapses and logistical disorganization.
“All that has gone away,” said David Wallechinsky, president of the International Society of Olympic Historians. “The current IOC is much friendlier to the United States. It’s a better environment.”
After Chicago’s failed bid, USOC officials made it their mission to improve frayed relations, and in the past five years there have been plenty of changes among both the IOC and the USOC leadership. Thomas Bach became the IOC’s new president in 2013, while Scott Blackmun took over as the USOC’s CEO in 2010. 

6.45 p.m. update: It's Boston. There was some confusion on Twitter after the announcement was made, with some tweeters appearing to think Boston had won the actual games. Not yet; today they just won the right to be the official American city bidding for 2024. The International Olympic Committee will announce the final selection in the summer of 2017. (Prior to that, in July of this year, the site of the 2022 Winter Games will be announced. Beijing and Almaty are the two candidate cities still in contention.)



Original Post:
I didn't realize it but today is a key milestone date in the march to the 2024 Summer Olympics. Later today the United States Olympic Committee Board of Directors is expected to select one of four American cities to go forward with the official U.S. bid for 2024. Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington D.C. are in the running; here are two of the video pitches:

Washington D.C.



San Diego



USOC 2024 Olympic Games Bid Cities (Image: USOC)

In 2024 it will have been 28 years since the U.S. last hosted the Summer Games (Atlanta 1996) and 22 years since our last Winter games (Salt Lake City, 2002.) Political reality might suggest that it's our turn. Stay tuned, if I hear an announcement I'll update this post.

Monday, October 6, 2014

And Then There Were Two...

Oslo has now dropped out of the bidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics, leaving just two candidate cities, Beijing and Almaty, Kazakhstan. According to gamesbids.com, a site which obsessively tracks all things related to Olympic bids, neither city is ideal:

Beijing controversially hosted the Summer edition of the Games in 2008 and plans to reuse some of the city venues for the 2022 Games; but the snow venues are considered too distant in the mountains.  Almaty in Kazakhstan does not have a well-developed winter sport culture and four years ago was dropped from the 2018 bid shortlist for not measuring up.

The 2022 bid will be award on July 31 next year. Read the story here
What about the next games, in summer of 2024? Several cities are gearing up to bid, including four in the U.S.: Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington D.C. The winning city will be announced in 2017; in the meantime, the team organizing the Washington D.C. bid now has a website, DC2024.org, check it out here

Wednesday morning correction: It's Oslo that dropped out this week; Stockholm had been in the bidding but dropped out earlier this year. 

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

And Then There Were Four

Another city has dropped out of contention to host the 2022 Winter Olympics. When the Sochi games kicked off there were 6 cities in the semi-final stage of preparing a bid, then Stockholm dropped out in mid-February.

Now Krakow, Poland has withdrawn due to a lack of public support. That leaves 4 cities on the list:

Almaty, Kazakhstan
Beijing, China
Lviv, Ukraine
Oslo, Norway

gamesbids.com, a site that obsessively tracks all things related to Olympic host bidding, say Lviv and Oslo could also withdraw their bids, Lviv due to the conflict with Russia and Oslo for a lack of financial support. There's beginning to be some news coverage of the apparent disinterest in hosting the games; here's how The Guardian's playing it.