The 2030 Winter Olympic host, expected to be Salt Lake City or Sapporo, Japan, is no longer targeted to be decided before next fall, the IOC said in announcing wider discussions into the future of the Winter Games, including the possibility of rotating the Games within a pool of hosts.
The IOC Future Host Commission was granted more time to study factors, including climate change, that could impact which cities and regions host future Winter Olympics and Paralympics. The 2030 Winter Games host is not expected to be decided before or at an IOC session next September or October.
Hosts have traditionally been chosen by IOC members vote seven years before the Games, though recent reforms allow flexibility on the process and timeline. For example, the 2024 and 2028 Games were awarded to Paris and Los Angeles in a historic double award in 2017. The 2032 Summer Games were awarded to Brisbane last year without a traditional bid race.
Italy hosts the 2026 Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo.
There are three interested parties for the 2030 Winter Olympics, the IOC said Tuesday without naming them. Previously, Salt Lake City, Sapporo and Vancouver were confirmed as bids. Then in October, the British Columbia government said it would not support a Vancouver bid, a major setback, though organizers did not say that decision ended the bid. All three cities are attractive as past Winter Games hosts with existing venues.
U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee officials have said Salt Lake City is a likelier candidate for 2034 than 2030, but could step in for 2030 if asked.
The future host commission outlined proposals for future Winter Olympics, which included rotating hosts within a pool of cities or regions and a requirement that hosts have an average minimum temperature below freezing (32 degrees) for snow competition venues at the time of the Games over a 10-year period.
The IOC Executive Board gave the commission more time to study the proposals and other factors impacting winter sports.
The IOC board also discussed and will continue to explore a potential double awarding of the 2030 and 2034 Winter Olympic hosts.
Also Tuesday, the IOC board said that Afghanistan participation in the 2024 Olympics will depend on making progress in safe access to sports for women and young girls in the country.
On Monday, Human Rights Watch urged the IOC to suspend Afghanistan until women and girls can play sport in the country.
In a press release, the IOC board expressed “serious concern and strongly condemned the latest restrictions imposed by the Afghan authorities on women and young girls in Afghanistan, which prevent them from practicing sport in the country.” It urged Afghanistan authorities to “take immediate action at the highest level to reverse such restrictions and ensure safe access to sport for women and young girls.”
The IOC board also announced that North Korea’s National Olympic Committee will be reinstated when its suspension is up at the end of the year.
In September 2021, the IOC banned the North Korean NOC through the end of 2022, including banning a North Korean delegation from participating in the Beijing Winter Games, after it chose not to participate in the Tokyo Games.
North Korea, formally known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, was the only one of 206 National Olympic Committees to withdraw from Tokyo. The country made its choice in late March 2021, citing a desire “to protect our athletes from the global health crisis caused by the malicious virus infection.”
The IOC said in September 2021 that it “provided reassurances for the holding of safe Games and offered constructive proposals to find an appropriate and tailor-made solution until the very last minute (including the provision of vaccines), which were systematically rejected by the PRK NOC.”
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Canadian snowboarder Max Parrot, who came back from 12 rounds of chemotherapy for Hodgkin’s lymphoma to win slopestyle gold and big air bronze at February’s Olympics, will not compete this season but plans to return in the future.
“After ten years of sacrifice and continuous efforts to win, I’m allowing myself to take a break to recharge my batteries during this first year of the Olympic cycle,” Parrot, 28, said in a press release. “I still won’t stop training.”
Parrot, after earning his first Olympic medal in 2018 (slopestyle silver), was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma on Dec. 21 of that year. Thirteen months later, he came back to win the X Games Aspen big air title.
In the Beijing slopestyle final, Parrot won with a 90.96-point second run of three. He called it the best run of his career with a triple cork 1620, a triple cork 1440 and a triple cork 1620.
“Three years ago, I was laying down on a hospital bed, going through cancer,” he said after taking gold. “It was never an option for cancer to beat me, but for sure I was scared a lot of time.
“I just try to smile all day long now, and the results comes with that as well.”
In May, Parrot and his fiancée, Kayla, welcomed their first child.
Parrot is the most decorated Canadian Olympic snowboarder with a medal of every color.
Previously, two-time Olympic halfpipe champion Chloe Kim and 2018 Olympic big air gold medalist Sébastien Toutant announced they are taking the post-Olympic season off.
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The Diamond League, track and field’s premier international circuit, is scheduled to have 15 meets in 2023, the most in the series’ 14 seasons.
The season begins as usual in Doha in early May and ends, for the first time, in the U.S. with Oregon’s Prefontaine Classic designated the Diamond League Final on Sept. 16-17.
A meet in Silesia, Poland, was added as a full-time stop to the usual 14-meet lineup. Last year, Silesia was a late addition to replace two Chinese events that were, for a third consecutive year, canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The meets in Shanghai (July 29) and Shenzhen (Aug. 3) are back on the calendar in 2023.
The Diamond League wraps around August’s world championships in Budapest.
2023 Diamond League/Track and Field Schedule
May 5: Doha
May 28: Rabat
June 2: Rome
June 9: Paris
June 15: Oslo
June 30: Lausanne
July 2: Stockholm
July 6-9: USATF Outdoor Championships
July 16: Silesia
July 21: Monaco
July 23: London
July 29: Shanghai
Aug. 3: Shenzhen
Aug. 19-27: World Championships
Aug. 31: Zurich
Sept. 8: Brussels
Sept. 16-17: Eugene (Prefontaine Classic/Diamond League Final)
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