It will be 'big and punchy': Athletics chief Coe looks to future
Athletics - World Athletics 2023 March Council Meeting - Monaco - March 23, 2023 World Athletics president Sebastian Coe during a press conference. (PHOTO/Handout via World Athletics)
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Sebastian Coe
has two years left as World Athletics president and it promises to be lively as
he says next year's inaugural World Athletics Ultimate Team Championship will
remind the world the sport is "big and punchy and still there."
The 68-year-old
Englishman has shrugged off the disappointment of finishing third in the
International Olympic Committee presidential election in March, saying he
is "not one for rear view mirrors."
"Concede
and move on," he adds.
Move on he
certainly has.
The old brio,
dynamism and charm are all to the fore as he addresses the issues that will
dominate the final leg of a 12-year tenure that - like his Olympic gold
medal-winning track career - has never been dull.
The World
Championships arrive in September in Tokyo - "a massive moment", Coe
says, not least because there will be spectators unlike at the Covid-delayed
2020 Summer Olympics in the same stadium.
"Everybody
gets the emotional impact" of that, he added.
Then attention
switches to the World Athletics Ultimate Team Championship, slated for
September 11-13, 2026, in Budapest -- the city which hosted the 2023 world
championships.
Each session will
last three hours and athletes will represent both themselves and their national
teams, wearing national kit.
"Next year
is unashamedly aimed at TV," Coe said in an interview following Friday's
Paris Diamond League meet.
"It's
unashamedly aimed at unlocking new audiences.
"So we go
from '24 where we have a big global audience in the Olympic Games to '25 which
are world championships.
"2026 now
gives us, in September, an opportunity for the world to remember we're big and
punchy and still there."
Another former
track great, Michael Johnson, had wanted to make just such an impact with his
Grand Slam series this year.
However, it
failed to sparkle and the fourth and final stop in Los Angeles was cancelled.
Coe says just as
World Athletics learn from their events, so will Grand Slam.
"We want to
be enablers. I'm not the 'computer says no' federation," said Coe.
"We want to
encourage fresh thinking and fresh income into this sport.
"I've been
involved in startups, it's complicated. But execution is everything."
Coe says those
who suffer from any fallout are the athletes, who he has striven to enrich as
much as possible.
To that end the
World Athletics Ultimate Team Championship will boast a record-setting prize
pot of $10 million (9.6 million euros) -- "everybody will pick up
something."
World Athletics'
decision to sanction awarding prize money to Olympic gold medallists in Paris
last year did not win Coe many friends in the International Olympic Committee
hierarchy or among the federation chiefs of other sports.
However, he
remains undeterred.
"Prize
money and improving the lot of the athletes in the next few years is really,
really important," said Coe.
"Although
prize money wasn't flavour of the month in Lausanne (where the IOC is based),
we are going to drive ahead on that."
Coe says he has
always battled for athletes' financial well-being. He and former IOC president
Thomas Bach -- who handed over power to Kirsty Coventry on Monday -- co-wrote a
speech he delivered to the 1981 IOC Congress raising the topic.
Coe says the
idea for the Paris prize money came to him on a long-haul flight to New York in
February 2024, and he rang Abby Hoffmann, a WA Council member, from a book shop
asking her opinion about his "crazy idea."
"She
replied I think you should take more long-haul flights, and that was how it
came about."
Coe says it is
only fair when one considers the wealth of the IOC.
"They're
competing in a movement that has billions of dollars," said Coe.
"It's a bit
like Taylor Swift being the only person not being paid at the concert, but the
volunteers and the janitors and the concessions and everybody else is doing OK
out of it."
Coe and WA's
decision to impose a blanket ban on Russian athletes over the invasion of
Ukraine was another area where he and Bach disagreed.
That ban remains
in place, although Coe concedes if a peace agreement is reached then it is not
for sport to stand in the way of the Russians' return.
The conflict,
though, has left its mark on Coe after a visit he paid to Ukraine.
"When you
get to Kyiv (train station), there's probably 50 or 60 ambulances and hearses
waiting on the platform.
"Families waiting for the news. They have two carriages, mobile operating theatres and intensive care units, where amputations are taking place as the train's coming back.
"So, sorry,
it's not something I could ever really be neutral about."


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