Tag: 2020 Olympics

  • Charles Sale: BBC ‘cost Turkey 2020 Olympics’

    By CHARLES SALE

    PUBLISHED: 21:55 GMT, 10 October 2013 | UPDATED: 21:55 GMT, 10 October 2013

    The BBC, who were accused of derailing England’s doomed 2018 World Cup, are now being blamed for Istanbul losing out to Tokyo as hosts of the 2020 Olympics.

    Advertising tycoon Sir Martin Sorrell, who worked on the Istanbul bid, told the Leaders in Football conference it was a ‘tragedy’ that Turkey had been passed over. He claimed the BBC’s coverage of the Taksim Square clashes in July between riot police and anti-government protesters had influenced the IOC vote in Buenos Aires last month.

    Sorrell said the BBC had been ‘unfair’ on Turkey by ‘over-egging’ the Istanbul demonstrations and that the Turks strongly believed broadcasts by the Corporation and CNN had damaged their chances.

    Blast: Advertising tycoon Sir Martin Sorrell

    The England 2018 bid team, which included Sorrell, were extremely upset over the BBC scheduling a Panorama programme about FIFA corruption in the week of the Zurich vote.

    A BBC spokesman said: ‘The Istanbul protests were a significant news story. We are satisfied our coverage was accurate and impartial.’

    The FA are looking at a possible bid for the 2024 European Championship. Turkey would be hot favourites if they prefer that option to hosting the semi-finals and final in 2020 when the tournament is spread across Europe.

    Sorrell, meanwhile, told LiF that entertainment and media agency WME, along with venture capitalist company Silver Lake, was hot favourite in the forthcoming $2billion sale of sports marketing giants IMG. If so, that would mean Ari Emmanuel, co-CEO of WME and brother of former White House chief of staff and current mayor of Chicago Rahm Emmanuel, becoming one of world sport’s most powerful figures.

    via Charles Sale: BBC ‘cost Turkey 2020 Olympics’ | Mail Online.

  • Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid

    Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid

    ANKARA, May 1 (Xinhua) — Turkey’s sports minister has accepted the apology from the governor of Tokyo for criticizing Istanbul’s bid for the 2020 Olympics.

    Turkish Youth and Sports Minister Suat Kilic said on Wednesday “we now wish for a friendly competition between the candidate cities abiding by the criteria established by the International Olympic Committee.”

    Tokyo Governor Naoki Inose apologized Tuesday after he said “Islamic countries, the only thing they share in common is Allah and they are fighting with each other” in an interview by the New York Times.

    His controversial remarks soon prompted criticism in Turkey and the International Olympic Committee.

    Tokyo is competing with Istanbul and Madrid to hold the Olympics for a second time after becoming the first Asian city to host the Games in 1964. Istanbul is bidding for a fifth time after its previous campaigns were unsuccessful.

    The hosts for the 2020 Games will be decided at the next IOC Session in Argentina in September.

    Editor: yan

    via Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid – Xinhua | English.news.cn.

  • Olympics Features: Istanbul 2020: World Bank confirms strength of Turkish economy

    Olympics Features: Istanbul 2020: World Bank confirms strength of Turkish economy

    LAURA WALDEN / Sports Features Communications

    50217 olympic image1

    (SFC) A senior official at the World Bank praised Turkey’s economic performance in these past years giving a boost to the nation’s economic outlook and reinforcing the bid.

    Martin Raiser, the country director for Turkey at the World Bank, spoke in Washington this past week affirming that Turkey has been performing wonderfully since the latest global economic crisis. He also feels that that the country is likely to reach high-income status within the next three years because of its young demographic.

    Their desire to host the Games would set off a huge rise in mass sport participation, particularly among the Turkey’s 31 million people under the age of 25. This vision emerges from a stellar decade of economic history.

    Raiser said, “Social inclusion is increasing in Turkey mainly thanks to the spread of economic activities.” He was speaking at an event organized by the Turkish Industry & Business Association (TÜSİAD), Koç University and the Economic Research Foundation (ERF) where he highlighted that the significant investment in infrastructure and public services that has been made has energised Turkey’s substantial economic growth.

    Speaking from the Sport For All Congress, Hasan Arat, Chairman of Istanbul 2020, was thrilled at the news. He said,”This is a welcome endorsement from the World Bank in that it supports the message that we are explaining to the Olympic Movement.

    “Turkey’s financial strength ensures that Istanbul 2020 is in a position to deliver a technically excellent Games which will realise the potential of Turkey and the surrounding region’s young people. The government is investing $2.5 billion in 693 sports facilities and 25 new stadia as well as $500 million annually into sports participation and development programmes, regardless of whether Istanbul are awarded the Games.

    “This investment will engage the entire nation, making sport more accessible to Turkey’s 31 million young people under the age of 25.”

    Ugur Erdener, IOC member and President of the NOC of Turkey, noted on the investment in facilities, “The huge investment into sports infrastructure will benefit all levels of sport participation in Turkey. The National Olympic Training Centre, which is being built this year regardless of the bid outcome, will serve as both an elite and recreational sport resource.

    “The Olympic City will serve 600,000 people as a “live, work, play” community. These world-class facilities will create a generation of opportunities for the region’s young people to participate in sport from grass roots, through to elite level.”

    Istanbul is bidding against Tokyo and Madrid to host the summer Games and the final decision will be taken on September 7th at the IOC session in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

    via Olympics Features: Istanbul 2020: World Bank confirms strength of Turkish economy.

  • Why Turkey Needs the Olympics

    Why Turkey Needs the Olympics

    Why Turkey Needs the Olympics

    Turkey’s bid should be about promoting sports culture, not proving itself to the world

    ANATOLIAN DISPATCHES blog: Posts from across the Bosporus. The Republic of Turkey is turning its attention eastwards and proving itself a heavyweight in the Middle East arena. ‘Anatolian Dispatches’ sets the compass to the new Turkish orientation.

    Imagine yourself catching a taxi in Paris or London. On discovering you are a tourist the driver may, (or likely will not) inquire after your opinion of the city. This is small talk and the driver invests little in your response.

    The experience is rather different in Turkey. The taxi driver will undoubtedly ask after your thoughts on the city, in hopeful expectation that you will be full of praise.

    This comparison was drawn by a foreign colleague living in Turkey, and is clearly indicative of Turks’ desire to be liked. Turks want to be appreciated and are anxious to prove to the world that they are as good as others.

    Turkey has recently gained a new opportunity to prove its credentials to the world. Istanbul is one of the three candidates contending to host the 2020 Olympics Games. This will be Turkey’s fifth attempt at hosting the Games. If Istanbul does succeed this time, ahead of the two other candidate cities Madrid and Tokyo, it will be the first time that Olympiads are hosted in a country with a majority Muslim population.

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently visited Turkey to assess Istanbul’s 2020 bid. Although the official motto for Istanbul 2020 is “Bridge Together,” the main line of persuasion appears to be “we deserve it!”

    What lies behind this conviction is the belief that Turkey, in view of the huge strides it has made in the last two decades, can successfully organize the Olympic Games. But according to experts this is not the right strategy.

    Bağış Erten, a Turkish sports journalist feels that “it is not right to enter this type of competition with Madrid and Tokyo about who deserves it most. If we enter that kind of race, Madrid for instance will get ahead since it has a much better sports culture and much better sport infrastructure.”

    The Olympic Games are not just about constructing sports facilities but about creating a sports culture and in this respect Turkey does not have the “Olympic spirit,” Erten told me.

    But this absence of Olympic spirit can be turned into an opportunity. “Precisely if the Olympic Games are about creating that spirit, then granting them to Turkey will then provide it with the opportunity to create that spirit. Different types of sports find it hard in Turkey to strive; but the Olympic Games might open the way for other sports to develop,” Erten appealed.

    Banu Yelkovan, another sports journalist recalled the advice given by Terrence Burns, one of the IOC consultants who visited Turkey last year.

    “He told us openly: ‘The right question is not how; everybody knows how to do it, but you should ask yourself why we are going to do this.’” The answer according to Erten should be “because we need it.”

    Erten is concerned that in Turkey the Olympic Games are being perceived purely as a construction matter, he says that he has yet to see any proof of how the Olympic Games will create a much needed sports culture in the country.

    Turkey has to make a choice between whether it will become like Athens, where the wasted investment is counted among the reasons for their current economic turmoil, or Barcelona, which thrived in sports after hosting the Olympics, insists Erten, before reminding me of the poor state of sport in Turkey at present:

    Officials said the facilities will be open to the people; they will not become parking lots. But in Istanbul there are already sports facilities that are underused. The issue is about creating that awareness, that conscience. This needs to have a pedagogical dimension, media dimension, but in a country where there are efforts to make sports an elective course in schools, you can’t talk about a sports culture.

    Istanbul’s projected infrastructure budget of USD 19.2 billion is by far the highest of the three bid cities, compared with the USD 1.9 billion for Madrid and USD 4.9 billion for Tokyo. Public support among Turks is equally high as polls show that Istanbul’s bid has the support of 83 percent of the city’s residents and 76 percent of Turkey’s population.

    Why is public support so high? Is it because Turks want to show the world that they are capable of successfully hosting the world’s biggest sporting event? Have they really considered the economic sacrifices that will have to be made, and are they motivated by a desire to promote sport or is it all for show? I for one am not convinced these questions are being asked by the public, which is instead driven by the sense of achievement that the Olympic Games will bring.

    Barçin Yinanç

    Barçın Yinanç started her career in journalism in 1990 at Milliyet Daily, one of Turkey’s major newspapers. She worked as a diplomatic reporter covering Turkish foreign policy issues, Turkey–EU relations, transatlantic ties and regional developments from the Middle East to the Caucasus. In 2001, she became a television reporter for CNN Türk, later becoming a program editor for the same channel. She is currently a columnist for the English-language newspaper Hürriyet Daily News. She lives in Istanbul.

  • Istanbul to name third bridge “Olympiat” should 2020 bid be successful

    Istanbul to name third bridge “Olympiat” should 2020 bid be successful

    By James Crook

    April 8 – Istanbul will name its planned third Bosphorus bridge “Olympiat” should the Turkish city be announced as the host city for the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

    This picture taken on April 14, 2010 in

    Construction on the 1,875-metre bridge is due to begin on May 29 – the 550th anniversary of the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in 1995 – during his four-year term as Mayor of Istanbu l- that the construction of a third bridge “would mean the murder of the city”, but performed a dramatic U-turn, claiming that the 4.5bn Turkish lira (£1.6 billion/€1.9 billion/$2.5 billion) project would go ahead, regardless of whether investment was acquired.

    “There is demand for a third bridge, and nobody will be left on the road.” claimed Erdogan in 2012.

    “In the worst case, we will build the bridge using the national budget.

    “We can afford it.”

    The planned third bridge crossing the Bosphorus will be dubbed “Olympiad” should Istanbul’s bid to host the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics be successful

    Designed by Frenchman Michel Virlogeux, the bridge will become the world’s longest combined rail and road bridge, as well as being among the top 10 longest suspension bridges in the world.

    It will connect the village of Garipçe in the Sarıyer district on the European side with the Poyrazköy neighborhood in Beykoz on the Asian side, and be a part of the projected 260 kilometre (160 mile) long “Northern Marmara Motorway” project.

    The fate of Istanbul’s bid to host the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games – which appropriately operates under the slogan “Bridge Together”- will be revealed in Buenos Aires on September 7 this year, where they will face rivals Madrid and Tokyo.

    The bridge is due to be completed in 2015.

    via Istanbul to name third bridge “Olympiat” should 2020 bid be successful – insidethegames.biz – Olympic, Paralympic and Commonwealth Games News.

  • Istanbul 2020 bid leaves ‘excellent impression’

    Istanbul 2020 bid leaves ‘excellent impression’

    Istanbul 2020 bid leaves ‘excellent impression’

    ISTANBUL: Istanbul’s presentation of its bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games left an “excellent impression” the head of the evaluation commission said on Wednesday. Turkey’s largest city, which is competing with Tokyo and Madrid for the 2020 Games, presented its candidacy to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) commission, headed by IOC vice president Craig Reedie, this week.

    Turkish officials highlight the bid as offering the first opportunity for a secular Muslim democracy to host the Games, which would also be the first staged on two continents – Europe and Asia. “These (visits) have been extremely well organised and we have an excellent impression of the skills and enthusiasm of the bid committee,” Reedie told a news conference. Keen to avoid indicating a preference for any of the three candidate cities, he added: “Excellent impression in my world is exactly the same as ‘hugely impressed’ or ‘greatly impressed’,” referring to his comments about Tokyo and Madrid.

    Istanbul’s projected infrastructure budget of $19.2 billion is vastly higher than the figures touted for Tokyo and Madrid, but the IOC’s Olympic Games executive director Gilbert Felli said most of this sum was not tied to the Games. “Even if the Games are not coming here, most of this budget will be spent,” Felli said. “The development of the new city of Istanbul, the new constructions, is part of what they are going to do anyway.”

    Each city delivered their candidature files to the IOC in January and on-site inspections by an evaluation commission were held in Tokyo and Madrid earlier this month. Technical assessments will be published at the beginning of July. Reedie said the strong government and business community support for the Istanbul bid impressed the commission.

    Young population: Sports minister Suat Kilic highlighted this as well as the country’s young population and dynamic economy as assets of the bid. Prime minister Tayyip Erdogan has transformed Turkey during his decade in power into the fastest-growing economy in Europe and raised the country’s profile as a regional power in the Middle East. The country has also enhanced its sporting profile over the last decade, with increased sporting success and growing experience in hosting international events.

    However, Istanbul’s growing population, currently around 14 million, has raised questions about the city’s ability to handle the transport challenges presented by the Games. Istanbul, like Turkey as a whole, is a major tourist destination, used to handling large numbers of visitors. In 2012, the total number of foreign visitors to Turkey rose 1.04 percent to 31.8 million people, according to official statistics. Istanbul was the third most visited city in Europe after London and Paris, and the fifth most visited city in the world last year, bid organisers said. With over 9 million guests in 2012, the number of visitors increased by 16 percent from the previous year.

    Kilic played down concerns that Istanbul’s bid could be undermined by the problems, which have faced organising committees for previous Olympics. In December, the IOC told organisers for the Rio de Janeiro 2016 Olympics they needed to push on with their preparations because time was an issue. Istanbul is bidding for the fifth time in the last six votes. The decision on who will host the 2020 Games will be taken by the IOC in September. reuters

    via Daily Times – Leading News Resource of Pakistan – Istanbul 2020 bid leaves ‘excellent impression’.