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July 13, 2005

U.S.O.C. Executive Is Optimistic for 2016 Games

Filed at 7:53 p.m. ET

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -- The chief executive officer of the U.S. Olympic Committee believes the United States has a much better chance of bringing the Summer Olympics to America in 2016 than it did for 2012.

In an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday, Jim Scherr also said the USOC will strongly support softball in its attempt to be re-included on the Olympic program, but said baseball has to clean up its drug-testing issues, among others, before it receives the same backing.

Reflecting on New York's failed bid to land the 2012 Olympics, Scherr said he felt the issue with the stadium -- state leaders rejected a plan for one in Manhattan about a month before the vote -- played a role in the International Olympic Committee's decision to bypass America's largest city during its vote last week in Singapore.

''I'm sure it created a little bit of lack of confidence as to whether there might be more changes down the road if New York were selected,'' Scherr said. ''But there were so many factors that you can't just say it was one thing.''

He buys into the commonly held belief that New York entered the process as an underdog. That was not only because of the strength of the bids from London and Paris, but because of the scandal that rocked the bidding process for the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, and because the United States is unpopular politically around the world.

''That's always going to make this an uphill battle,'' Scherr said. ''But next time, we'll be further removed from the Salt Lake Games. Hopefully, the world view of us and our international politics will be different at that point in time. Clearly, I think it will by then.''

With New York undecided about bidding for the 2016 Olympics, Scherr reiterated that the USOC wants an open process to determine the city it will choose as a potential host for those games. The USOC board will begin developing timelines and parameters for the bid process at its meeting in September.

With Paris essentially removing itself from a 2016 bid, and with Asia and Europe represented in the Olympic rotation between now and then, Scherr believes a U.S. city will stand a good chance of landing the first Summer Games in America since Atlanta in 1996.

''It all plays into it to make it more favorable for a city from North America and the U.S. to be successful,'' he said.

In other news out of Singapore last week, the decision to ax softball and baseball from the Olympic program beginning in 2012 was viewed by many as a harsh blow to the United States, which has more traditional ties to both sports than any other country.

The USOC is spinning a different story, saying it was more the responsibility of the international federations of the sports than the United States to keep them viable in front of the IOC.

Scherr believes softball and baseball were wrongly lumped together by many in the international community -- with softball being viewed as the female equivalent of baseball and not its own sport.

He said the USOC would put its full support behind getting softball back into the games. He portrayed the sport as an ideal for the Olympics, especially from the American perspective.

''It's a critical sport for the U.S. Olympic program because of the number of girls who participate nationwide and the importance of that to the USOC and the American public,'' Scherr said. ''If an international or national federation asks for support, certainly we'll provide it. We're motivated to do it for softball.''

En route to the gold medal in Athens, the U.S. team outscored opponents 51-1, leading some to believe it was cut because of American domination. In 2000, however, the U.S. won much less convincingly, losing three games and coming within a game of elimination.

''To penalize a team for achieving that level of excellence is, I think, incredibly unfair,'' USOC spokesman Darryl Seibel said. ''You don't have to go back too far to see there is balance in the sport.''

The USOC doesn't have near the same commitment to bringing back baseball.

Scherr said Major League Baseball's unwillingness to let its players participate in the Olympics, combined with ongoing steroid and drug-testing issues made it an easy target for the IOC.

Other issues working against baseball included the high cost of building stadiums for the Olympics, then finding a use for the stadiums once the games are over; the qualification process, a single-elimination tournament that left the United States -- the 2000 gold medalist -- out of the Athens Games; and the lack of support for the sport in Europe.

Scherr conceded there was a stigma with having an American-born sport pushed out of the Olympic program.

''But unless they work on all those issues, it would be really hard for the USOC to join there, regardless of what we want to do,'' he said.

 

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