KIRSTY COVENTRY
Sport

IOC president emphasises engaging youth

AFTER four months in office as the president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), Kirsty Coventry is “extremely positive” about her initial discus­sions with International Federa­tions (IFs) regarding the way forward.

“I’m really extremely posi­tive and very excited about all the feedback, because with just as many challenges that the International Federations have acknowledged, they’ve also ac­knowledged all the opportunities that are coming with it,” Coven­try said in her keynote address at the IF Forum on Monday at the Olympic Museum.

“It’s not all going to be easy. We’re not always going to agree, but we all do believe that there does need to be some change made,” she added.

The IOC honorary president, Thomas Bach, was a special guest at this year’s IF Forum, an annual event — organised by SportAccord — that brings inter­national sports leaders together to address shared challenges, discuss best practices and boost collaboration in an ever-chang­ing landscape.

The three-day event began on October 27, under the theme: ‘The New Global Reality in Sport: IFs in a world that refuses to stand still.’

Since taking the helm of the Olympic movement, Coventry, who won seven Olympic medals in swimming for Zimbabwe, including two golds, has been spearheading a “Fit for the Future” process, which has produced several working groups focused on some of the burn­ing issues of the organisation. And she has continued to collect ideas — also from athletes — that can “help shape the Olympic movement”.

“Having platforms like the IF Forum allows for us to re­ally stretch the imagination, to stretch the boundaries, to look at things in a new way.

“What does this Olympic pro­gramme look like? What should it look like? What disciplines? Which sports? Conversations that I believe will make us better. And will make us more relevant.’’

Coventry recalled attending the IF Forum for the first time as the chair of the IOC Athletes Commission.

While it was an overwhelm­ing occasion for her at the time “having all the big discussions with the presidents of the federa­tions” she quickly realised that everyone in that room had the same purpose: “to ensure that our sports remain relevant, that we ensure to create platforms for athletes to realise their hopes, their dreams, and to be able to live those dreams and those hopes.”

Coventry added: “We have a lot of turbulent times hap­pening in our world today. And we are faced with many, many challenges and obstacles. And we are only going to be able to overcome these challenges and obstacles if we work together.”

For Coventry, engaging the young generation is at the core of her leadership.

“Because just like a family, we, I hope, would always be trying to make decisions for the betterment and the strength of the family.

“We want things to be better for our children and our chil­dren’s children,” she explained.

“And we want the next gen­eration to be able to have faith in who we are. They have to trust us.

“They have to understand the policies we’re putting in place. We have to show transparency in how we’re making decisions and why we’re making decisions.

“And we’ve all been doing a really good job, and now we need to do even more. There’s an even greater expectation from the younger generation today looking at us that don’t always believe in the institutional values of sport or democracy. All of these different categories of life are being challenged daily.

“And we have to find ways to ensure that sport remains neutral. But above anything else, it remains the platform for young people to believe that life could be better.”—AIPS.

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