- Title: Allocating Olympics in both 2024 and 2028 "win, win, win" - Bach
- Date: 10th July 2017
- Summary: LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND (JULY 10, 2017) (REUTERS) **** WARNING CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY **** INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE PRESIDENT THOMAS BACH AND LOS ANGELES MAYOR ERIC GARCETTI ARRIVING FOR NEWS CONFERENCE
- Embargoed: 24th July 2017 16:19
- Keywords: Olympics 2024 Los Angeles Bach IOC International Olympic Committee Lausanne Eric Garcetti
- Location: LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND
- City: LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND
- Country: Switzerland
- Topics: Olympics,Sport
- Reuters ID: LVA0016P4XK5B
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach appeared to suggest on Monday (July 10) that sporting body would award both the 2024 and 2028 Olympic Games together.
Currently, the IOC are only preparing to vote on the host country for the 2014 Games at their next meeting in Peru in September.
The two candidates, Paris and Los Angeles, are both going for the 2024 games but the American city has said they would be open to hosting the event four years later.
At a news conference alongside LA mayor Eric Garcetti, Bach said that if the IOC session voted to allocate both events simultaneously then it would be a "win, win, win".
At the jovial news conference, Garcetti agreed with Bach, appearing to open the door for Los Angeles in 2028.
"At this crazy moment in the world, when so much is unsure, lets bring what we know to be true and good and that is the Olympic movement. The way it unites people, the way it breaks down barriers, the way it becomes bridges when there are too many walls in our world. We welcome the executive board's decision to look at the simultaneous award of two, successive summer games. We think this, as you said, a "win, win, win" and we are very excited," said Garcetti.
Bach also praised the heritage of Los Angeles as an Olympic city, after it hosted the event in both 1932 and 1984.
Representatives from both the LA and Paris bids, including French President Emmanuel Macron, are in Lausanne to present their bids. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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