By Tom Degun
October 11 – Sports Minister Hugh Robertson says Britain must rid itself of using the term ‘Decade of Sport’ as it implies a sense of entitlement to host major sporting events.
“Nothing will hurt us more, or kill the likes of our 2018 Football World Cup bid, quicker than any sense of entitlement,” Robertson told insideworldfootball.
“With our 2018 bid for example, the moment we say, ‘This needs to come to Great Britain because we haven’t had it longer than anyone else’ is the moment it is dead in the water.
“We have made that mistake in the past with major sporting events so let’s not make it again.”
“Decade of Sport” or “Golden Decade” were commonly used by the likes of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown and London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe to refer to the fact that the Britain had been awarded, or was bidding to host, a number of major international sporting events between 2010 and 2020.
They include the London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics, the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games, the Rugby Union 2015 World Cup and a bid for the Football 2018 World Cup.
But the Sports Minister - who has appeared to rule out the 2015 Athletics World Championships by stating the Government is unlikely to underwrite a bid for them - said the phrase must be dropped as it suggests Britain has an arrogance about being awarded major championships.
“Technically, our bids for major events in Great Britain will always be extremely strong as we’ve got the venues, we’ve got the transport and we’ve got plans in place regarding how to organise them efficiently, but that doesn’t mean we are owed anything by any stretch of the imagination,” he said.
Robertson would like to see more major sporting events come to Britain but said there were a number of financial implications involved in hosting them, which is why he refuses to commit to underwriting a bid for the World Athletics Championships in 2015.
“Of course I would like to see more major sporting events [in Britain] but there are obviously heavy financial costs involved and we as the Government can’t simply be left to pick up the bills if there are funding gaps,” he said.
“We should also remember we should not just be handed any sporting events on a silver platter just because we bid for them.
“We must earn them by illustrating exactly why we are the best candidates to stage them.”
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