Reuters/London
World athletics head Sebastian Coe said yesterday the award of the 2021 World Championships to the US city of Eugene without a bidding process was perfectly legitimate, after French prosecutors announced an investigation of the decision.
French national financial prosecutors said a case had been opened in response to media reports questioning the award by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), which has been shaken in recent months by a wider corruption and doping scandal.
Coe, who was vice president of IAAF when the games were awarded in April, told BBC Radio Four it was not unprecedented for decisions to be made without a bidding process. Japan’s Osaka was given the 2007 event in such circumstances.
“Eugene was not put forward by the IAAF but by US Track and Field,” Coe said. “The Council decided this was the best opportunity in the foreseeable future to get the championships into the US.
“We did not have cities like Miami or Chicago falling over themselves to put themselves forward.”
Eugene is closely linked to US sportswear firm Nike. That connection also caused disquiet as Coe was a long-standing paid ambassador for the company and had to defend himself against accusations that leaked internal Nike emails suggested he supported their bid.
The double Olympic champion denied there was any conflict of interest, but severed the link two weeks ago, describing “noise” around the situation as a distraction as he sought to deal with the doping and corruption crisis.
The French Ministry of Justice issued a statement yesterday explaining why it had opened the case having been made aware of the unusual nature of the decision and Coe’s potential conflict of interest by international media.
“The object is to determine the conditions under which the hosting decision was taken and whether corruption offences, money laundering or a conspiracy to benefit from criminal association have been committed in France.”
That broader IAAF scandal mirrors in part a corruption affair shaking world soccer’s governing body, FIFA. Decisions to award the World Cup to Russia and Qatar in 2018 and 2022 have been under investigation, though both countries deny wrongdoing.
Coe’s predecessor as president, Lamine Diack, is being questioned by French police over accusations he took payments of hundreds of thousands of dollars to ensure athletes who had failed drugs tests would be free to continue to compete.
The World Anti-Doping Agency WADA has suspended Russia’s anti-doping body as part of a crackdown on drug cheating in Russia which has already been suspended from international athletics.
The world championships, which began in 1983 and are now staged every two years, have never been held in the United States, the sport’s most powerful nation in terms of performance but which struggles to attract viewers and sponsors.
Coe has previously said that the decision for Eugene was made after a presentation by Diack, who said financial and commercial opportunities had arisen that he felt meant the city should be awarded the rights without contest.
The IAAF Council voted 23-1 in favour, with one abstention, with those behind a potential bid by the Swedish city of Gothenburg left frustrated and confused at the change of tack.
Bjorn Eriksson, leader of the Gothenburg bid and former head of Interpol subsequently said the decision “smelled” and needed an investigation.
Asked about corruption within the organisation on Thursday, Coe said: “If that has happened it would be abhorrent,” but said he could not comment further because of police involvement.
World anti-doping chief heads to Kenya
Nairobi: A team from the World Anti-Doping Agency led by its director general David Howman will visit Kenya next week to inspect the implementation of anti-doping policies, Kenyan officials said yesterday.
Kipchoge Keino, chairman of the National Olympic Committee of Kenya said Howman will lead a two-day inspection of Kenya’s long-promised measures to fight doping, following claims that the east African nation known had failed to take any credible action.
“The team will meet the newly-established Anti-Doping Association of Kenya and the lawyers appointed by the IAAF Ethics Commission to probe alleged corruption and cover-up of doping offences in Athletics Kenya,” said Kipchoge, on returning from an IOC board meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland.
“WADA is concerned that Kenya has not done much, and yet we have 43 athletes who have been suspended for drug-related offences since 2012,” said Kipchoge.
IAAF chief Sebastian Coe