Squash Delegation Arrives In Buenos Aires Ahead Of Olympic Vote by Howard Harding
Thursday 5 September, Buenos Aires:
The World Squash Federation (WSF) delegation that will present its case
to join the 2020 Olympic Games today arrived in Buenos Aires ahead of
its presentation to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Session
on Sunday. Squash is one of three sports being considered by the IOC
for inclusion in the 2020 Olympic Games, but the only one never to have
featured in the Games.
Members of the WSF
delegation will be unveiled at a media briefing at the Hilton Hotel
(the IOC official hotel) in Buenos Aires on Friday 6 September at 1530.
Speaking upon their arrival in Buenos Aires, WSF President and head of the delegation N Ramachandran (pictured above) said:
"This is the third
consecutive bid by Squash to join the Olympic Games so our journey to
get here has been a long one - 10 years in fact. We have learnt an
enormous amount in that time. We have listened to the IOC, taken on
board their advice and as a sport we have truly evolved and embraced
innovation. There can be no doubt that Squash can offer something
exciting and fresh to the Olympic experience, and we are proud to be
the only new Olympic sport on the shortlist.
"Squash would be low
cost and easy to integrate into the Games with just 64 athletes. We
could share a venue if required, or be located to showcase an iconic
backdrop - and we have a track record of doing exactly this, such as in
front of the Pyramids.
"We are a genuinely
global sport played in 185 countries by many millions across the world.
We are growing in regions such as South America, central Europe, China,
and India as well as in the more traditional Squash areas including the
United States, where we have over one million players. The order books
of court manufacturers are the fullest they have ever been.
"Squash can honestly
say that now we are more than ready. Our sport has been on a journey of
innovation in recent years, especially in the way it is broadcast and
presented. State of the art all-glass courts, referee video review,
lighting and music have radically enhanced the spectator experience.
"Our sport also
embraces gender parity and many of our key events have equality in
prize money for men and women. Squash is gladiatorial, physically
demanding and mentally challenging. We are already played in every
major multi-sport Games and the respected Forbes Magazine has described
us as the 'world's healthiest sport', and of course we have a 100%
doping-free record. These are themes that we will certainly bring to
life in our presentation.
"On Sunday we hope to demonstrate to the IOC that Squash is a sport that represents the future, not the past."