U.S. Olympic CEO deserves credit for decision to take pay cut, but she and board still should be shown the door

U.S. Olympic CEO deserves credit for decision to take pay cut, but she and board still should be shown the door

When it comes to tone-deafness and managerial ineptitude, I thought I had seen and heard it all in my nearly 40 years covering the leadership and operations of the U.S. Olympic Committee.

I should have known better.

I feel that way even though U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee chief Sarah Hirshland executive has, to her credit, agreed to take a voluntary pay cut of an unspecified amount from her $600,000 annual salary, as she revealed in a Friday statement to Globetrotting.

The USOC may have changed its name to the USOPC last July, but it has not changed the spots that have made its operations a confounding detriment to the athletes it is supposed to serve.

The USOPC bottomed out morally in its untenable decision to ask Congress for $200 million of the federal coronavirus stimulus bill funds, as first reported Wednesday by the Wall Street Journal.

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Even in (finally) arriving at the right choice by postponing 2020 Olympics, actions of top U.S. and IOC officials were inglorious

Even in (finally) arriving at the right choice by postponing 2020 Olympics, actions of top U.S. and IOC officials were inglorious

Now that sanity has prevailed, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics have been moved to 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic (but will still be called the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in the International Olympic Committee’s parallel universe), what can we take away from the way the decision was reached and about its ramifications?

A handful of thoughts:

1. The IOC’s abysmal handling of its messaging over the last month will be a case study in how not to do public relations.

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IOC vice-president DeFrantz says she has no official word yet on 2020 postponement

IOC vice-president DeFrantz says she has no official word yet on 2020 postponement

International Olympic Committee vice president Anita DeFrantz of the United States said Monday she had not yet received any official word that a final decision on any postponement of the 2020 Olympics has been made.

“If that is the case, then you know more than a vice-president of the International Olympic Committee,” DeFrantz said via telephone from her home in Santa Monica, Calif. “It would be news to me.”

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IOC says 2020 Olympics decision within four weeks; former marketing chief says 2021 only alternative; Aussies, Canada say no to 2020 while U.S. walks IOC line

IOC says 2020 Olympics decision within four weeks; former marketing chief says 2021 only alternative; Aussies, Canada say no to 2020 while U.S. walks IOC line

Under growing pressure from the world sports community to put off the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, the International Olympic Committee finally used the word “postponement” in conceding Sunday that its steadfast “The Games Will Still Go On” position in the face of the coronavirus pandemic was untenable.

The IOC’s announcement, in the form of a statement and a letter to athletes from its president, Thomas Bach, did not rule out the possibility of the Games opening in a scaled-down form as scheduled this July 24 and made only two definitive statements:

*Cancellation of the 2020 Olympics is “not on our agenda.”

*The IOC expects to be able within four weeks to have a decision on when the 2020 Olympics will take place.

An hour prior to the Sunday announcement, a well-connected Olympic marketing executive had told me in a telephone conversation that he saw a postponement to 2021 as the decision.

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U.S. Olympic leaders decline leadership role on fate of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, refuse to call publicly for postponement

U.S. Olympic leaders decline leadership role on fate of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, refuse to call publicly for postponement

The leaders of the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee, chief executive Sarah Hirshland and board chair Susanne Lyons, did just what I expected in a Friday media teleconference,

They equivocated.

Completely passed the buck to the International Olympic Committee on the fate of the 2020 Olympics rather than have the USOPC stake out a higher moral ground, which the IOC long has been unwilling to do on far more matters than just the coronavirus issue.

Fell back on bureaucratic speak.

Repeated several variations on the mantra, as expressed by Lyons, “I can assure you there is no circumstance when the USOC would send our athletes into harm’s way.”

Declined to take a stand showing they meant what that mantra implies.

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