U.S. Olympic CEO deserves credit for decision to take pay cut, but she and board still should be shown the door

U.S. Olympic CEO deserves credit for decision to take pay cut, but she and board still should be shown the door

When it comes to tone-deafness and managerial ineptitude, I thought I had seen and heard it all in my nearly 40 years covering the leadership and operations of the U.S. Olympic Committee.

I should have known better.

I feel that way even though U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee chief Sarah Hirshland executive has, to her credit, agreed to take a voluntary pay cut of an unspecified amount from her $600,000 annual salary, as she revealed in a Friday statement to Globetrotting.

The USOC may have changed its name to the USOPC last July, but it has not changed the spots that have made its operations a confounding detriment to the athletes it is supposed to serve.

The USOPC bottomed out morally in its untenable decision to ask Congress for $200 million of the federal coronavirus stimulus bill funds, as first reported Wednesday by the Wall Street Journal.

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U.S. Olympic leaders decline leadership role on fate of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, refuse to call publicly for postponement

U.S. Olympic leaders decline leadership role on fate of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, refuse to call publicly for postponement

The leaders of the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee, chief executive Sarah Hirshland and board chair Susanne Lyons, did just what I expected in a Friday media teleconference,

They equivocated.

Completely passed the buck to the International Olympic Committee on the fate of the 2020 Olympics rather than have the USOPC stake out a higher moral ground, which the IOC long has been unwilling to do on far more matters than just the coronavirus issue.

Fell back on bureaucratic speak.

Repeated several variations on the mantra, as expressed by Lyons, “I can assure you there is no circumstance when the USOC would send our athletes into harm’s way.”

Declined to take a stand showing they meant what that mantra implies.

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Full of vainglory, IOC grandees sweat details about Tokyo 2020 while hiding big picture

Full of vainglory, IOC grandees sweat details about Tokyo 2020 while hiding big picture

The International Olympic Committee said some things Tuesday about the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and the coronavirus in the form of what it called a “communique,” because the simple word “statement” apparently is not good enough for these self-appointed pooh-bahs.

The dispatch from Olympus publicly addressed only the issue of how athletes who have yet to qualify for the Summer Games might do so, which shows the IOC is 1) rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic and/or 2) is so distanced from reality it won’t acknowledge the elephant in the room until the beast finishes shitting on them.

The statement tries to justify avoiding mention of the possibility these Summer Games might not take place as scheduled by saying, “any speculation at this moment would be counter-productive.”

That comes at the end of a paragraph reading, “The IOC remains fully committed to the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, and with more than four months to go before the Games there is no need for any drastic decisions at this stage. . .”

There is no need for “drastic” decisions now.

What is needed is for the IOC to tell the truth about whether it is considering alternatives to 2020. It is foolhardy for the IOC to say speculation would be counter-productive when every person with a functioning brain is wondering what decisions the IOC might take if “drastic” action is needed and when such decisions might be made.

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Time for IOC to drop Pollyanna act and tell everyone there may be no Olympics in 2020

Time for IOC to drop Pollyanna act and tell everyone there may be no Olympics in 2020

There are some 11,000 athletes hoping to compete at the Summer Olympics scheduled to open July 24 in Tokyo.

At this point, all those athletes should be able to (choose a biblical or mythological metaphor):

*See the handwriting on the wall.

*Feel the sword of Damocles above their heads.

And yet the president of the International Olympic Committee and the Prime Minister of Japan refuse to acknowledge publicly the possibility the 2020 Summer Games won’t take place in 2020 – or ever.

In their hubristic refrain that the Games will go, these alleged leaders provide unjustifiable encouragement to athletes whose preparation and qualification processes already have been severely disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.

These athletes, who get an Olympic opportunity once every four years, deserve honesty, not self-interested, Panglossian avoidance of reality.

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Ten years later, Queen Yuna’s iconic crown glitters with transcendent brilliance

Ten years later, Queen Yuna’s iconic crown glitters with transcendent brilliance

How could a 19-year-old woman achieve perfection while bearing an entire nation’s hopes and the baggage of its past, while 50 million South Koreans stood on her shoulders as she tried to stay upright while doing triple jumps on a slippery surface with knife-thin blades?

That is what Yuna Kim did 10 years ago on this date, lifting spirits in her homeland and elevating herself into a singular place in Olympic history by winning the women’s figure skating title at the 2010 Winter Games.

How? Even Kim still marvels over that, as she said in an email interview done this month through her management company. Even now, the moment confounds her, brings back the nervousness she had in Vancouver and, as it did then, makes her teary-eyed because she feels overwhelmed.

“I always wonder how I did it, and every time I watch, it doesn’t seem real,” she said.

She had not only won South Korea’s first Olympic figure skating gold medal but had beaten an exceptionally talented Japanese rival for it, a fact of no small consequence given the complicated history of relations between Japan and South Korea for five centuries. Sports competitions between the two countries had always been freighted with nationalistic implications.

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