Published: 08:58, September 17, 2024
Coe, multi-millionaire Eliasch among seven candidates for IOC presidency
By Reuters
International Olympic Committe (IOC) President Thomas Bach (left) and World Athletics President Sebastian Coe react as they arrive to give the medal during the podium ceremony for the women's marathon of the athletics event during the closing ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the Stade de France, in Saint-Denis, in the outskirts of Paris, on Aug 11, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

World athletics chief Sebastian Coe, multi-millionaire and Olympic newcomer Johan Eliasch and Zimbabwe's Sports Minister Kirsty Coventry are among seven candidates for next year's International Olympic Committee presidency election, the IOC said on Monday.

IOC Vice-President Juan Antonio Samaranch, son of the late former IOC president, international cycling chief David Lappartient, Prince Feisal Al Hussein of Jordan and international gymnastics federation head Morinari Watanabe are also in the running to succeed current president Thomas Bach.

The 70-year-old German is stepping down next year after 12 years at the helm. The election will be held at the IOC session in ancient Olympia, Greece in March 2025.

The candidates will all present their programs, behind closed doors, to the full IOC membership in January 2025.

The IOC, with 111 members currently, is in charge of the Olympic Games and the multi-billion dollar industry linked to the world's biggest multi-sports event.

Bach's departure comes with the organization in a financially robust position, having secured $7.3 billion for the years 2025-28 and $6.2 billion already in deals for 2029-2032.

FIS president Johan Eliasch holds the globe ahead of the podium ceremony for the Women's Overall general standing of the FIS Ski World Cup in El Tarter, Andorra, on March 19, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)

The president is elected to an eight-year first term with the possibility of a second term of four years, if re-elected.

Coe, 67, only joined the IOC in 2020 after a rocky relationship between World Athletics and the IOC over Coe's ban of Russian track and field athletes almost a decade ago following the country's doping scandal.

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A former Olympic champion with a wealth of experience in the sports world, Coe was previously head of the London 2012 Games and the British Olympic Association. He is also a former Conservative Member of Parliament.

Coventry, 41, is the only woman running for president and the former Olympic swimming champion, who is Zimbabwe's most decorated Olympian, could become not only the first female president but also the first from Africa.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach (left) and Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission Kirsty Coventry attend a press conference closing an executive board meeting at the IOC headquarters in Lausanne, on Jan 9, 2020. (PHOTO / AFP)

Male presidents

All IOC presidents have been men, with eight of the nine from Europe and one from the United States.

The 62-year-old Eliasch, head of the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS), only joined the IOC in July, with the Swedish-born British businessman's candidacy a surprise for some.

Prince Feisal, 60, is a member of the IOC executive board, having joined the organization in 2010, while Spaniard Samaranch, with considerable IOC experience in his six years as vice president, headed the coordination commission for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.

"The IOC and Olympic movement have made enormous strides over the past decade under the leadership of Mr Bach," said Samaranch in a statement.

"The IOC now needs a new leader with deep experience of the Olympic movement who can help steer it through this period of upheaval."

The Olympic flag flies during the handover ceremony of the Olympic Flame for the Paris 2024 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games at Panathenaic stadium in Athens on April 26, 2024. (PHOTO / AP)

UCI chief Lappartient has been a rapidly rising figure within the sports world after joining the IOC in 2022.

The Frenchman also is in charge of esports within the IOC, having helped seal a 12-year deal with Saudi Arabia earlier this year for the Olympic esports Games.

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Japan's Watanabe, 65, has headed the gymnastics federation (FIG) since 2016, having been re-elected twice since, and is his country's first ever candidate for the IOC presidency.

Under current rules members have to step down when they reach 70, the IOC's age limit, unless they are given a four-year extension.