IOC Figure’s Stance on Olympic Athlete Prize Money Sparks Wide Controversy



Sports News
IOC Figure’s Stance on Olympic Athlete Prize Money Sparks Wide Controversy

Kirsty Coventry competed as a swimmer across five Olympic Games from 2000 to 2016, and chaired the IOC Athletes’ Commission between 2018 and 2021. As a former elite athlete and ex-leader representing competitors, she was expected to enjoy solid backing from Olympians worldwide.

Background of Kirsty Coventry’s Olympic and IOC Career
 
Kirsty Coventry competed as a swimmer across five Olympic Games from 2000 to 2016, and chaired the IOC Athletes’ Commission between 2018 and 2021. As a former elite athlete and ex-leader representing competitors, she was expected to enjoy solid backing from Olympians worldwide.
Controversial Remarks Against Olympic Prize Bonuses
 
In an interview with commentator Alex Chapman from New Zealand sports outlet SportNationNZ on May 22, Coventry made contentious statements. She stated she opposes prize money payments to athletes at the Olympic Games. Hailing from a small nation and coming from a sport with historically modest athlete compensation, she maintains that organising committees should not distribute event remuneration to Olympic participants.
Alternative Support Proposal for Full Athlete Life Cycle
 
Coventry clarified she is not against all forms of athlete financial support. Instead, she advocates creating more sustainable assistance channels covering athletes’ entire career journey: funding for pre-Games training, competition support during the Olympics, and professional transition aid after retirement from elite sport.
Follow-up Statement Released via Official IOC Athlete Platform
 
On May 28, Coventry posted a supplementary explanation on the Instagram account of Athlete365, the official IOC service hub for competitors. She reaffirmed her consistent opposition to official Olympic prize money schemes.
Core Reason Behind Her Opposition to Olympic Cash Awards
 
Her fundamental argument is that formal Olympic prize funds would only benefit a tiny group of top-tier medal-winning athletes, failing to deliver fair support to the vast majority of participating Olympians across all sports and nations.
 
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