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India on Diamond League radar: IAAF president

Sebastian Coe, in Jakarta for the Asian Games, also said he was impressed with the rise of Indian athletes such as Hima Das and Neeraj Chopra.

Published : Aug 25, 2018 17:18 IST

IAAF president Sebastian Coe said India is an important market for his organisation.
IAAF president Sebastian Coe said India is an important market for his organisation.
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IAAF president Sebastian Coe said India is an important market for his organisation.

India might get to host the Diamond League of athletics as the glitzy showpiece, which features the top stars of the sport, needs to be taken to all major cities of the world, International Association of Athletics Federations president Sebastian Coe said on Saturday.

“The concentration of Diamond League or world events has historically been in European countries. We want to maintain that strength, but we have to make sure that big cities are hosting our sport, cities like Delhi, Tokyo, Beijing in Asia,” said Coe, in Jakarta for the ongoing Asian Games.

The Diamond League is a 14-leg series in which top athletes compete for prize money and points. It was established in 2010 to replace the Golden League to take the sport beyond Europe, and as IAAF’s contract with the event sponsors draws to an end, discussions are being held to take it to new cities.

“We have one more year with the Diamond League contract. Those discussions are taking place at the moment but I want to see our world events being spread around the world. I want to see the sport in big populations, in big cities and this has to be the objective,” the two-time Olympic champion said.

“Next year we have Asian athletics championship in Doha, then Olympic games in Tokyo and the world indoor championship in Nanjing in 2020. Asia is going to be the focus of the sport for next four or five years,” he added.

Apart from Europe, Asian countries such as China, Qatar and Morocco are already hosting Diamond League events.

Coe, who won the 1,500m gold medals at the 1980 and the 1984 Olympic Games, was impressed with the rise of Indian athletes such as Hima Das and Neeraj Chopra.

“She was very impressive. I was in the stadium. In know the impact that had in India. This is a good sign, athletics is beginning to grab the consciousness of the population. I remember the CWG (Commonwealth) in 2010, you had stadiums full every night.”

The IAAF president said India is an important market for his organisation.

“It is very encouraging, India is a very important country for the potential to grow our sport. You have a federation which is very ambitious to grow the sport,” he said.

“I see India as very important for helping us globalise our sport and there is a huge sponsorship and broadcast market which is something we should be doing a lot more work in. That’s the objective of the IAAF,” he added.

Mixed relay event, with two men and two women athletes competing together as a team, will make its debut at the Asian Games in Jakarta. Coe said innovation was the need of the hour.

“We have had mixed relay in 2015 at the world youth championships, the world relay event in Bahamas was particularly successful. They will be in 2020 in Tokyo and we showcase one in Doha to globalise it before we take it to Tokyo.

“We have to be creative and innovative and do things differently. We will review the impact now and the next year. Obviously we can’t have it in every event but it’s a good sign. It has got a new dimension,” he said.

The Dynamic New Athletics style will make its debut the European Games next year. In the new format, mixed-gender teams will compete in a knockout format over five days, the action concluding in two hours.

Asked if the format can be tried at the Asian Games too, Coe said, “Every sport is looking to do things differently. It does not always mean, it will be successful, it does not always mean that you take it to mainstream.”

Talking about dope-tainted Russia’s inclusion in IAAF, Coe said it will still take some time.

“Good progress has been made but that’s not quite enough. We are waiting for next report in November. There are elements of testing (WADA) and controlling some of the coaches. Some have been banned, generally good progress,” he said.

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