Olympic officials move to support 2032 Brisbane Games after bumpy ride for stadium projects

Australia’s most influential Olympic official, John Coates, had called the stadium issues in Brisbane’s home state Queensland damaging to the Olympics brand.

Published : Mar 28, 2024 10:43 IST , BRISBANE - 2 MINS READ

 IOC President Thomas Bach speaks to the media during a Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games media update.
IOC President Thomas Bach speaks to the media during a Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games media update. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
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IOC President Thomas Bach speaks to the media during a Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games media update. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

After weeks of uncertainty about billion-dollar stadium projects for the 2032 Brisbane Olympics, the IOC and local organisers moved Wednesday to present the games more positively.

Plans for a $2 billion rebuild of the storied Gabba cricket stadium as an Olympics centrepiece were dropped this month after the expected price spiralled. Australia’s most influential Olympic official, John Coates, had called the stadium issues in Brisbane’s home state Queensland, damaging to the Olympics brand.

Queensland Premier Steven Miles, who faces state elections in October, had asked for a review of Olympic venue construction and prefers renovating an existing rugby stadium for the opening and closing ceremonies.

Reports that Queensland had explored getting out of its commitment to host the Olympics were dismissed as “fake news” last week by International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach.

It led to IOC and local organising officials being asked on Wednesday — after their annual review of preparations — how Queensland could be made to fall in love again with the games.

“I’m not seeing a change in that feeling,” insisted Kirsty Coventry, the IOC executive board member overseeing the Brisbane project, adding that 8½ years out from the games “is the time for changes to happen.”

Coventry and Andrew Liveris, president of the Brisbane 2032 organising committee, spoke repeatedly of following “due diligence” and adapting to the needs and wishes of local people and public authorities.

“Right now, state government has given us venues and we are going to work on that,” Liveris said in an online news conference.

Coventry, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in swimming for Zimbabwe, said an IOC priority was athletes and ensuring “fields of play are world standard.”

“It is obviously again dependent on what the people in the communities want, how the region is growing,” she said. “That is not something we as the IOC will dictate. That is where we listen.”

Stadium issues and curbing costs have become the biggest challenge for Brisbane almost three years since the Olympics were awarded in 2021 fully 11 years ahead of the opening ceremony.

Brisbane was the first Summer Games host picked in a new process to put a preferred candidate into exclusive, fast-track talks without facing a rival bidder in a vote. The IOC aimed to cut the cost of campaigning and building venues, and also avoid the kind of vote-buying scandals that tainted the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics and 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

However, the Brisbane win was seen to have lacked transparency and rewarded a key IOC ally, its vice president Coates.

“The giving and awarding of Brisbane up until now have actually been very good,” Coventry said, “and been very good learning experiences.”

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