SPORTS> Center
7 sports plea for 2016 Olympics inclusion
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-17 10:21

LAUSANNE, Switzerland: Seven sports hoping to be included in the 2016 Olympics made their pitch to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Monday.

Golf, karate, squash, baseball, softball, rollersports and rugby are vying for a maximum of two spots in the programme.

The IOC, eager to revamp the schedule to attract younger audiences, will shortlist two of the seven sports in August before a final vote on their inclusion two months later.

Related readings:
 All six more athletes identified for doping at Beijing Olympics
 Stars back push for golf at Olympics
 IOC board to pick two new sports for 2016 Olympics
 Canadian prostitutes get training for the Olympics

 Illinois Senate OKs $250m backing for Chicago's Olympics bid

Madrid, Tokyo, Chicago and Rio de Janeiro are bidding to host the 2016 Games, with the host also picked in October.

"To be the first gold-medal winner in 112 years? I will be 53 then," said 2010 European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie as golf presented its case to the IOC's executive board.

"We have missed out on that for more than a century," added the Briton. Golf was last an Olympic sport in 1904.

The presentation team showed a video with top players past and present including Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods pledging their support to golf's bid to join the Olympics.

"I think we shot under par," said Swede Annika Sorenstam, widely regarded as the best female player of all time.

7 sports plea for 2016 Olympics inclusion

Baseball officials assured the IOC a "selection of the best players" would be made available for the Olympics despite a clash with the Major League Baseball (MLB) season.

No MLB games would be scheduled on the days of the medal matches. "We do not want to compete against any Olympic broadcast," said international federation chief Harvey Schiller.

Baseball and softball became the first sports to be taken off the programme in 2005 since polo was excluded in 1936 and will not feature in the 2012 London Games.

"We want to get back to having an Olympic dream," said international softball chief Don Porter. "We hope we did enough to get a favourable decision."

Karate officials said their sport, with around 100 million registered athletes worldwide, would be a non-contact version that would award points for specific moves.

Reuters