This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/sports/olympics-may-drop-wrestling-in-2020.html
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 4 | Version 5 |
---|---|
Olympic Fixture Since 708 B.C. Will Be Dropped | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Wrestling, one of the earliest and most elemental Olympic sports, was dropped from the Summer Games on Tuesday in a stunning and widely criticized decision by the International Olympic Committee. | |
Apart from track and field, wrestling is considered by many the oldest competitive sport, one that made its first appearance at the ancient Olympic Games in 708 B.C. and thrives on its rudimentary attractiveness — one athlete trying to subdue another, not with equipment but with the fundamental use of the arms, upper body and legs. | |
Yet it was precisely the traditional nature of wrestling that appeared to doom it. A shift in priority has occurred in an era of outsize television contracts as Olympic officials seek to add more telegenic sports and more widely visible stars in hopes of maintaining a sense of relevance, modernity and youthfulness in the Winter and the Summer Games. | |
Both freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling will be contested at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, but they will be excluded from the 2020 Summer Games, for which a host city has not yet been named, the I.O.C. said Tuesday. | |
The decision to drop wrestling was made by secret ballot by the Olympic committee’s 15-member executive board at its headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland. The exact vote and the reasons for the decision were not given in detail. | |
There is a chance that the Olympic Committee could reverse its decision in May, when it considers a 26th sport to add to the 2020 Games. A final decision will be made in September, but wrestling’s immediate Olympic future seemed doubtful, according to veteran observers of the Games. | |
In recent years, the I.O.C. has expressed concern about the growing size of the Summer Games and has wanted to cap the number of athletes at about 10,500. It has also said that it wants to attract younger viewers to the international television audience. On Tuesday, the committee said in a statement that it wanted to ensure that it remained “relevant to sports fans of all generations.” | |
Olympic-style wrestling, with its amateur roots and absence of visibility except during the Games, does not have superstars with widespread international acclaim like Lionel Messi in soccer, Kobe Bryant in basketball, Tiger Woods in golf and Usain Bolt in track. And in the United States, the popularity of Olympic-style wrestling is surpassed by the staged bombast of professional wrestling. | |
Sports like snowboarding have been added to the Winter Games to broaden their appeal. Golf and rugby will return at the 2016 Rio Games after long absences. Among the sports that wrestling must compete with for future inclusion are rock climbing, rollerblading and wakeboarding. | |
The I.O.C. may have also grown frustrated that Greco-Roman wrestling did not include women, experts said. Women began participating in freestyle wrestling at the 2004 Athens Games. | |
Politics, too, play an inevitable role in the workings of the I.O.C. Among the sports surviving Tuesday’s vote was modern pentathlon, also threatened, and less popular internationally than wrestling. But modern pentathlon, a five-event sport that includes shooting, horseback riding and running, was invented by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Games. And it is supported by Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr., son of a former I.O.C. president and a member of its executive board. | |
Mark Adams, a spokesman for the I.O.C., told reporters in Lausanne that Tuesday’s vote was a “process of renewing and renovating the program for the Olympics.” | |
He added: “In the view of the executive board, this was the best program for the Olympic Games in 2020. It’s not a case of what’s wrong with wrestling, it is what’s right with the 25 core sports.” | |
Wrestling’s world governing body, known by its initials as FILA and based in Switzerland, said it was “greatly astonished” by Tuesday’s decision and would take “all necessary measures” to persuade the I.O.C. to keep the sport in the Summer Games. | |
The vote to eliminate Olympic wrestling produced immediate and widespread criticism. | |
“I think this is a really stupid decision,” the Olympic historian David Wallechinsky said, noting that wrestling “was in the ancient Olympics.” | |
He added: “It has been in the modern Olympics since 1896. In London, 29 different countries won medals. This is a popular sport.” | |
Wrestling seemed in many ways to be the perfect Olympic sport. It is as basic as running; it has broad global appeal, with governing bodies in 180 countries and a power base that extends from the United States to Russia to Japan to India to Iran; and it is contested in a small area that is easily depicted on TV. Perhaps most important, the Olympics are considered wrestling’s ultimate competition, which is not the case in soccer and in basketball. | |
Through the years, Olympic wrestling has provided a number of stirring moments, perhaps none that surpassed the shocking Greco-Roman victory by Rulon Gardner of the United States over the heavily favored Aleksandr Karelin of Russia — who had not lost in 13 years — at the 2000 Sydney Games. | |
“When you think of the Olympics, you think of wrestling,” said Cael Sanderson, the wrestling coach at Penn State and a 2004 Olympic freestyle champion. “It was a marquee event in ancient Greece and in the modern Games. After running, it was the next sport to be part of the Games. Like track and field, the Olympics are the highest level. Some sports, it’s just not as special.” | |
The dropping of wrestling delivered another blow to the United States, which has recently lost medal chances in baseball and softball, which have also been dropped from the Olympics. American wrestlers have won more than 100 medals at the Games. | |
“I don’t think anybody thought this would happen,” said Gardner, who also won a bronze in Greco-Roman wrestling at the 2004 Athens Games. “It’s a shame. This is one of the original sports. It’s been around for thousands of years. The Olympic movement has gone astray. It’s moving in the direction, not of history but of ratings. Is it about mainstream and money, or is it about amateur sports competing at the highest level on the world stage?” | |
Some wrestling officials said that FILA needed to change the sport quickly to retain any chance of future inclusion in the Olympics. Modern pentathlon, for instance, has reduced its competition from four or five days to one. | |
“We need to make some drastic changes in the sport, make it more attractive, especially for TV audiences,” Mikhail Mamiashvili, the president of the Russian wrestling federation and a 1988 Olympic gold medalist in Greco-Roman competition, told Reuters. | |
Mike Novogratz, the team leader for the United States freestyle team at the London Games, said that wrestling did not have influence with the Olympic Committee’s executive board, whose power is concentrated in Western Europe. Wrestling is more popular in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the United States. | |
“This wasn’t a decision of thought; this was a decision of friends,” said Novogratz, who is the chairman of the United States Wrestling Foundation and is a principal and member of the board of directors of the Fortress Investment Group LLC. | |
Novogratz also said that FILA had “dropped the ball and did not do a good enough job selling the merits of wrestling to the I.O.C.” He said, however, that he expected a “loud and aggressive response” from those in international wrestling. | |
Online petitions were being signed to try to save Olympic wrestling. Bruce Baumgartner, a two-time Olympic champion in freestyle wrestling who is now the athletic director at Edinboro University in Pennsylvania, said: “I know that wrestling is a strong sport around the world. It’s not just the U.S. and Russia. It’s a confusing, sad day for me. But I’ve been around the Olympic movement for a long time. It’s not over ’til it’s over.” | |
While wrestling remains popular at the high school level in the United States, and has added teams at the Division II and Division III college level, officials said, it has struggled at the Division I level with budget constraints and what some supporters say are requirements for gender equity. The loss of Olympic participation would hurt financing for USA Wrestling, the national governing body, and probably hasten the sport’s decline. | |
“When you have your Super Bowl every four years, if you take that away, that’s a scary thing,” said Sanderson, the Penn State coach. |