Results 1 to 15 of 53

Thread: Chicago is out.

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    indianapolis,indiana usa
    Posts
    22,881
    Quote Originally Posted by Grace View Post
    From Politico -

    That wasn't the article I was speaking about. The article I saw was
    saying that Europe still had a bad taste in their mouths from the Bush
    years & was not enclined to favor America's bid.
    I've Been Boo'd

    I've been Frosted






    Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.

    Eleanor Roosevelt

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    8,585
    Quote Originally Posted by lizbud View Post
    That wasn't the article I was speaking about. The article I saw was
    saying that Europe still had a bad taste in their mouths from the Bush
    years & was not enclined to favor America's bid.
    That's very interesting.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Kentucky, LAND OF THE EASILY AMUSED
    Posts
    25,224
    Hahahaha,

    MO told the IOC that she sat on her dad's lap cheering on Carl Lewis.

    She would have been about 20 years old to have pulled that off.


    Where is Shaq O'Neal to get the story straight?

    Those danged first ladies are full of poop and tall tales.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by RICHARD View Post
    Hahahaha,

    MO told the IOC that she sat on her dad's lap cheering on Carl Lewis.

    She would have been about 20 years old to have pulled that off.
    Was she in Oslo when she said that?

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    indianapolis,indiana usa
    Posts
    22,881
    Read this side-note to the Olympic bid.



    Acting head of US Olympic Committee to step down
    Published - Oct 07 2009 05:12PM EDT

    By EDDIE PELLS - AP National Writer



    FILE -- This is a July 15, 2009, file photo showing U.S. Olympic Committee acting CEO Stephanie Streeter posing at the Olympic training center in Colorado Springs, Colo. Streeter will leave her post within the next five months. Streeter, who took the job when Jim Scherr was forced to resign in March, announced the decision Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009, saying she wanted to get back into the corporate world.

    Six months of shaky decisions and turmoil came to a head for the U.S. Olympic Committee on Wednesday when its acting CEO said she would step down, bringing more chaos to an organization that was humiliated when Chicago's bid to host the 2016 Games fell flat.

    Stephanie Streeter said that she would not seek the USOC's CEO job on a permanent basis, and that she would leave in the next five months.

    The decision came just five days after Chicago's humbling, first-round exit in a vote by International Olympic Committee members, who ultimately picked Rio de Janeiro. It also happened on the same day leaders of America's Olympic sports organizations said "No" in a 40-0 vote to this question on a survey they conducted: "Do you believe the acting CEO has the ability to be an effective leader of the Olympic movement?"

    The United States contributes more money to the Olympics than any other nation, yet the USOC is rife with infighting and turnover, perceived internationally as arrogant, and populated with leaders who are having trouble turning things around.

    "I'm incredibly saddened by the developments, which I lay largely at the feet of the USOC, which has clearly lost its way," said NBC Universal Sports and Olympics chairman Dick Ebersol. "It's a combination of people who don't have a full-time commitment to it, too many people who really don't have an understanding of international sports and relationships. I don't believe there will be another Olympics in the U.S. until the USOC really gets its act together."

    USOC Chairman Larry Probst conceded that turning around the group's international reputation is not a one- or two-year project. "I'm talking 10, 15, 20 years," he said.

    Chicago's elimination in the first round was universally viewed as an embarrassment, and one of the biggest surprises ever handed down by IOC voters. One IOC member, Denis Oswald of Switzerland, went so far as to call it "a defeat for the USOC, not for Chicago."

    The USOC will hire a national recruiting firm by the end of the month to search for Streeter's replacement. The next CEO will be the third to sit in that chair in the span of about a year. The latest upheaval began in March when Jim Scherr was forced out after six years of relative stability and success.

    Ebersol said good candidates would be people with connections to major Olympic sports _ such as swimming, gymnastics, skiing _ with experience in marketing, international relations and the sports world.

    Probst, who said he has no plans to step down as chairman, acknowledged some of the USOC's problems.

    "We have plenty of good relationships, but the reality is, we don't have the political capital, the leverage, a spot on the IOC executive team," he said. "We need to do work over the long haul to have more of a presence."

    In several conversations with The Associated Press in the past few weeks, Streeter made it clear she didn't want to stay on and would announce that after the IOC awarded the 2016 Games. She said she wants to return to the corporate world _ she is a former CEO at Banta Corp. _ though she realizes many people will view her decision as a direct result of the Chicago vote and the increasing calls for change in the USOC leadership.

    "I had made this decision prior to the bid and clearly it makes sense to announce it as soon after as possible," she told the AP. "It makes sense to announce it at this time so the USOC has a clean slate when it goes into the search process."

    Depending on how the CEO search goes, Streeter could be with the USOC through March 21, which is when the Paralympics end in Vancouver. The Vancouver Olympics are set for Feb. 12-28.

    Whether her departure satisfies her critics will almost certainly depend on who the board chooses to replace her. The board also has been criticized as being out of touch with what the majority of the Olympic movement wants.

    "This is just a first step," said Steve Penny, president of USA Gymnastics and a key member of the leaders of national governing bodies who answered the questionnaire on Streeter.

    Ebersol, whose efforts have helped bankroll the Olympic movement to the tune of billions of dollars over the years, predicted Chicago losing out on the games will diminish the value of American TV rights by at least 15 to 20 percent, "just because it won't be the same level of advertising" a network could get from an American games.

    He expects NBC will still bid, though that wouldn't be an indicator that all is well at the USOC.

    "It won't just change from Stephanie Streeter not standing for re-election," he said. "The board has to be seriously re-examined for the fact that it lacks real leadership in all these key sports fields."

    Streeter was under intense scrutiny immediately after moving into the job from the board of directors. The switch came as a surprise to many in the Olympic movement, in part because the USOC had been functioning relatively smoothly with Scherr at the helm.

    She and Probst claimed the USOC needed a different, more businesslike approach to running things, especially considering the bad economy and the reluctance of some sponsors to re-sign with the USOC after the Beijing Olympics.

    There were some successes _ a handful of sponsors did come on board, and the USOC was able to increase funding for Winter Games athletes by one-fifth, partly by exceeding projected budget revenues.

    Those successes, however, were barely a blip _ overshadowed by the perceived missteps and criticism.

    Her arrival never was accepted by key leaders of the country's national sports governing bodies, who felt blindsided and wondered about the transparency of a move that elevated a volunteer board member into a paid position.

    They found more to complain about when the board approved a pay package with a base of $560,000 _ about 30 percent more than what Scherr earned. That only grew louder when the USOC botched the introduction of its TV network and drew criticism from the IOC.

    "I think we miscalculated on the network," Streeter said when asked if she had any regrets from her seven months on the job. "We miscalculated the reaction from the IOC and our TV partners at NBC. I still think it's a good idea. In retrospect, I would've altered timing on the announcement."

    There was also the complicated IOC-USOC revenue-sharing issue that Streeter and Probst managed to table _ but not solve _ about six months before the 2016 vote. Despite efforts on both sides, the lack of a resolution colors almost everything about how international Olympic leaders relate to the United States. Internationally, the Americans are perceived as taking too much of the money generated by the Olympics.

    IOC member Willi Kaltschmitt of Guatemala said the USOC needs to "rethink, reorganize and regroup."

    "There are a lot of wounds there," Kaltschmitt said. "It's an accumulation of things. We say 'dead corpses in the road.'"
    I've Been Boo'd

    I've been Frosted






    Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.

    Eleanor Roosevelt

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Illinois, USA
    Posts
    28,394
    In typical Chicago style, we are not moving forward from this but still discussing and splitting hairs over why we didn't get it (Because Mayor Daley went! Because Pres. Obama went! Because Pres. Obama said he wasn't going to go, and then he did! Because Pres. Obama arrived late! - I don't get that one, uhhhmm, he was THERE and I thought he did a great job as the last speaker for the panel - Because the Chicago presentation was flakey! Because of the U.S. Olympic Committee!). I don't think we will ever really know. Meanwhile, a 2-year-old was killed in a fire in a house without a working smoke detector -- low-income families can get them free from the CFD or their alderman's office, all they have to do is ask. And a father was charged with drowning his 19-month-old son to death. Get over it, people; we have bigger problems to solve!
    Last edited by cassiesmom; 10-11-2009 at 07:18 PM.
    Praying for peace in the Middle East, Ukraine, and around the world.

    I've been Boo'd ... right off the stage!

    Aaahh, I have been defrosted! Thank you, Bonny and Asiel!
    Brrrr, I've been Frosted! Thank you, Asiel and Pomtzu!


    "That's the power of kittens (and puppies too, of course): They can reduce us to quivering masses of Jell-O in about two seconds flat and make us like it. Good thing they don't have opposable thumbs or they'd surely have taken over the world by now." -- Paul Lukas

    "We consume our tomorrows fretting about our yesterdays." -- Persius, first century Roman poet

    Cassie's Catster page: http://www.catster.com/cats/448678

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    Copenhagen, Denmark - GMT+1
    Posts
    15,952

    For Richard...

    You will notice that Oslo is quite a distance from Copenhagen.
    Attached Images Attached Images



    "I don't know which weapons will be used in the third World war, but in the fourth, it will be sticks and stones" --- Albert Einstein.


Similar Threads

  1. Only in Chicago ...
    By cassiesmom in forum Dog House
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 10-29-2010, 07:35 PM
  2. Chicago
    By Pawsitive Thinking in forum General
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 08-17-2007, 03:39 AM
  3. Only in Chicago...
    By cassiesmom in forum General
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 07-06-2007, 10:57 PM
  4. Anyone near Chicago want to dog sit?
    By AdoreMyDogs in forum Dog General
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 05-19-2001, 03:31 PM
  5. Anyone live near Chicago, IL?
    By AdoreMyDogs in forum Dog General
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 02-23-2001, 03:06 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Copyright © 2001-2013 Pet of the Day.com