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yeah, probably, ๐ but consider that we have the former President of the IAAF covering up doping, taking bribes, impacting World Championship and Olympic placing. The head of the IAAF anti-doping covering up the very thing he is assigned to do, doping. the problem with athletics is that the athletes who grew up doping or accepting doping in sport then went on to become the governing figures in sport. If we have those in charge who were okay with it during the heydays of the 70's and 80's what makes you think they are going to change it when they have power? There's a reason the laughable records of the Chinese, East German, and so forth are still on the books.
"sport" needs to decide in who's interests it's being organised. for Nike and Adiddas, or the athletes.
Coe can still prove all the doubters wrong, he's got an awful lot of work to do, considering his past attitude tho
he's got an awful lot of work to do
that in reality needs to start with an apology, and a mea culpa about how in the last 7 years he should have done something.
That's pretty melodramatic.
No, it's true,people don't even run for the bus any more.
I can't see how Coe can continue at Nike and IAAF, it stinks. How can he be independent on say Salazar or any other Nike sponsored athlete / coach when they are both taking money from the same pot?
Nike already have too big a say in athletics look at the Nick Symmonds fiasco.
Russia suspended 22-1 votes
Looks like some IAAF officials missed the opportunity to make a bit of pocket money with that vote.
Let's see how long it lasts. I do suspect it will be "resolved" in a "glorious and ground-breaking new anti-doping agreement that will change the future of athletics for the better, forever" fairly quickly; certainly before the next Olympics.
I hope I'm wrong as they really need to make an example out of Russia.
Could be resolved after Seb Coe becomes poorly from drinking a dodgy cup of tea.
[url=
have suddenly decided to create an anti-doping agency.[/url]
The strong stance of the IAAF, so far ,is having a good effect elsewhere. Not sure how a country with an athletic history like Kenya doesn't have an anti-doping agency already! With how athletics defines Kenya on the international stage, it looks like they want to start clearing things up before they do a Russia. Good stuff.
people don't even run for the bus any more.
In the Middle East kids will take the school bus, even if they can see the school from their house. I'm talking a few hundred metres. If they are late for the bus not only will they not run for it, some won't bother going to school that day. Seriously.
[quote=nickc ]"sport" needs to decide in who's interests it's being organised. for Nike and Adiddas, or the athletes.
Don't be silly. Who do you think pays the bills? It's always worth bearing in mind that if you're not paying, you're probably the goods, not the customer.
Irrespective of any other arguments about Coe's position, what he has and hasn't done, what he was in a position to know about and to do, and whether he was playing a sneaky long game, for me his credibility went down the toilet when he attempted to shoot the messenger after becoming president. It was such a depressingly familiar position to take. What's more, it revealed him as being not quite as clever a politician as a lot of people seem to think - did he not realise such a stance would come back to bite him, and that the people he accused of making stuff up would get an opportunity to exact their revenge?
Well a certain person was rather lucky his grilling by MPs coincided with more important business in parliament
Or his woeful showing would've generated a lot more headlines
Props to the German documentary maker who exposed all this,in the audience he apparently did the [cough] liar [\cough] thing loudly every time Coe was bullshitting, which was a lot !
agreed, props to the German journalist for exposing this story leading to the arrests
Also apparently Coe never campaigned for Eugene to hold the Worlds, even though it was awarded with no bidding process and happens to be Nikes home town ๐
Oh well at least he is dropping his Nike role, even though apparently there was no conflict of interest.
Running joke
But what turns Coeโs latest protestations of ignorance into a running joke is the controversial email sent in July 2013 by senior IAAF official Nick Davies, which was leaked to the French press last month. In his email Davies, the IAAFโs deputy general-secretary, suggested suppressing embarrassing news about positive drug tests by Russian athletes until after the world championships a month later in Moscow.One of the options suggested in Daviesโs โvery secretโ five-point plan was to hire a London-based sports marketing company, CSM, as part of an โunofficial PR campaignโ to deal with negative stories in the British media. Coe is the executive chairman of CSM Sports and Entertainment, a subsidiary of Chime, the giant PR outfit founded by Margaret Thatcherโs favourite PR man, Tim Bell.
Following his election as IAAF president last August, one of Coeโs first appointments was to name Davies as his personal aide in charge of the presidentโs office.
Coeโs deal with CSM is worth at least 10 times the six-figure annual contract with Nike which he was forced to give up in December to avoid further potential conflicts of interest. At an awkward press conference in the IAAFโs tax haven of Monte Carlo, Coe made the point that, although IAAF president, he would continue his work with CSM. He may now need all the help it can expensively offer!
