In a statement yesterday titled, "An Opportunity to Serve," LA 2024 chairman Casey Wasserman said when the idea of awarding both games was initially brought up, Los Angeles stopped short of issuing an ultimatum of 2024 or nothing to the International Olympic Committee.
"We could have used that strategy, but we didn't because we thought it was presumptuous to tell the IOC what to do and how to think," Wasserman said.
Wasserman's statement comes two days before an IOC meeting to discuss the potential two-city award. It comes a week after LA Mayor Eric Garcetti acknowledged discussing with the IOC what it would take for Los Angeles to take the 2028 Olympics. Garcetti has said he'd want the IOC to offer funding for youth sports programs in the LA area.
Though both cities have contracts in place only for 2024, thus far, Paris has appeared much less willing to consider 2028.
The IOC is scheduled to award the 2024 Games at a meeting in September, but this week's meeting and another next month could all but determine the result of the bidding.
The spiraling cost of the games played a factor in the withdrawals of Rome, Budapest, Hungary, and Hamburg, Germany, from the contest for the 2024 Games. Boston was the U.S.
Olympic Committee's initial choice, but the city's run ended due to lack of public support.
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