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This article was first published 10 years ago

IOC opts for stability, money in picking Tokyo

September 08, 2013 11:25 IST

Image: Participants hold a banner during an event celebrating Tokyo being chosen to host the 2020 Olympic Games
Photographs: Yuya Shino/Reuters

The International Olympic Committee was in no mood for new adventures when it picked Tokyo as the host of the 2020 summer Olympics, opting for a "safe pair of hands" that could also boost its finances.

- Abe speech helps secure 2020 summer Olympics for Tokyo

Tokyo beat Turkish metropolis Istanbul in a landslide vote after Madrid were eliminated in the first round, taking the world's biggest multi-sports event back to Asia for the first time since the Beijing 2008 Games.

While Istanbul officials were left licking their wounds after their fifth failed bid in the last six votes, Tokyo were vindicated for a strategy which saw them highlight their solid finances and strong track record of delivering on promises.

The Japanese capital also dangled $4.5 billion in front of the IOC a year before the vote, saying the money for the Games was "in the bank."

"You described yourself as a safe pair of hands and as a surgeon even if I did not vote, this appeals to me," IOC President Jacques Rogge told Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during the contract signing ceremony after the vote.

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'Tokyo's bid was very, very good for athletes'

Image: International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge shows the name of the city of Tokyo elected to host the 2020 Summer Olympics
Photographs: Fabrice Coffrini /Pool/Getty Images

The Japanese capital took the lead from the start, landing 42 votes compared to 26 for Madrid and Istanbul, before beating the Turkish metropolis 60-36 in their final round.

Tokyo will now host the Games for a second time since 1964 while Istanbul, hoping the IOC would again go to uncharted waters after giving the 2016 Olympics to Brazil's Rio de Janeiro and to South America for the first time, leave empty handed.

"All three bids were strong bids," IOC Executive Board member John Coates told Reuters.

"But Tokyo's bid was very, very good for athletes, the concentration of venues there is very good."

Istanbul's lack of experience in staging major sports events

Image: Turkey enthusiasts react after finding out that Tokyo was awarded the right to host Olympics
Photographs: Martin Acosta/Reuters

"It was also good for the Olympic movement because much of our commercial support is in Asia," he said.

Coates also hinted the conflict in neighbouring Syria had been on the IOC members' minds.

"We also had the geopolitical uncertainties which Istanbul addressed really well," said the Australian.

Asked whether delays in preparations for the Rio Games may have alarmed members and could have swung votes in favour of Tokyo's solid bid, Coates said: "I may have heard that."

Tokyo's compact bid has estimated a non-Games budget of around $4.4 billion compared to $3.4 billion for the actual event.

Istanbul's proposal had a total cost of $19 billion, making it more ambitious but also risky given the country's lack of experience in staging major sports events.

'The problems with Rio played a role in this decision'

Image: (L-R) Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe President of the IOC Jacques Rogge, President of the Tokyo 2020 Committee Tsunekazu Takeda and Governor of Tokyo, Naoki Inose sign the host city contract
Photographs: Scott Halleran/Getty Images

Influential IOC member Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, who also heads the Olympic solidarity fund and is president of the Association of national Olympic committees, said it was exactly the Rio delays that swung the vote in Tokyo's favour.

The Brazilian city is under mounting pressure to speed up preparations, with the IOC obviously unwilling to repeat such an experiment in 2020.

"I think it was more the commitment to the file," he told Reuters.

"It was this commitment that was important. The problems with Rio played a role in this decision."

For the IOC it was a return to the most populous continent of the world and its vast commercial potential.

"It was once more a decision between two principles," said IOC Vice President Thomas Bach.

"There you have one candidature addressing more the sense of tradition and stability and another candidature addresses the longing for new shores."

"This we have seen in the past also with different bids and this times the IOC members - in a fragile world - have decided in favour of tradition and stability."

Source: REUTERS
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