Bruce Berglund
Registered User
- Nov 27, 2020
- 28
- 24
Yes, during the mid- to late-60s, Brundage made no secret of his dislike for the winter games to IOC members and even the American press. Some of his complaints have merit, and you still hear them today from critics of the Winter Games: too few countries participate in winter sports, thus betraying the universal ideal of the Olympic movement. And there are few places in the world with access to snowy mountains and available facilities for hosting the games.
But Brundage’s main concern was creeping professionalization and commercialization. A big culprit was hockey. He believed that hockey, like all team sports, could not be disentangled from commercial interests. “Any sport which becomes primarily a business has no place in the Olympic program,” Brundage told a Canadian journalist. “Professional sport is not sport at all but part of the entertainment business.” When the journalist pointed out that the loss of hockey would cut into the profits of the Winter Olympics, Brundage responded that the IOC didn’t care about profits. Privately, however, Brundage acknowledged that without hockey, the Winter Games would be finished. And he didn't care.
Brundage really hated hockey, but even worse were figure skating and Alpine skiing. He fumed in 1968 when Peggy Fleming and Jean-Claude Killy became international stars. After Fleming signed with an ice show, he grumbled that the Winter Olympics had become an "undignified feeder for the professional ice shows.” Killy’s offense was to wear branded skis on the slopes and then to show the company names when he was being photographed. Brundage refused to put the medals on Killy after he won – or even attend the Alpine skiing events – owing to the logos on the skier's equipment.
After the Grenoble Olympics, Brundage launched a commission of inquiry to determine whether the Winter Games should go on. The commission acknowledged the sprawl of venues and rising costs. But they insisted that the Winter Games should continue, and Brundage stood down. As a cost-saving measure, they recommended going back to the 20s and 30s, when hockey and figure skating were held on outdoor rinks. Host cities didn't need to build an “indoor ice palace,” their report said.
One lasting idea that came out of this commission was the recommendation to hold the Winter Games on a different four-year cycle than the Summer Games, to give them more attention. This is the idea that the IOC later approved in 1986, when they instituted the new cycle for the Winter Games, starting in 1994.
But Brundage’s main concern was creeping professionalization and commercialization. A big culprit was hockey. He believed that hockey, like all team sports, could not be disentangled from commercial interests. “Any sport which becomes primarily a business has no place in the Olympic program,” Brundage told a Canadian journalist. “Professional sport is not sport at all but part of the entertainment business.” When the journalist pointed out that the loss of hockey would cut into the profits of the Winter Olympics, Brundage responded that the IOC didn’t care about profits. Privately, however, Brundage acknowledged that without hockey, the Winter Games would be finished. And he didn't care.
Brundage really hated hockey, but even worse were figure skating and Alpine skiing. He fumed in 1968 when Peggy Fleming and Jean-Claude Killy became international stars. After Fleming signed with an ice show, he grumbled that the Winter Olympics had become an "undignified feeder for the professional ice shows.” Killy’s offense was to wear branded skis on the slopes and then to show the company names when he was being photographed. Brundage refused to put the medals on Killy after he won – or even attend the Alpine skiing events – owing to the logos on the skier's equipment.
After the Grenoble Olympics, Brundage launched a commission of inquiry to determine whether the Winter Games should go on. The commission acknowledged the sprawl of venues and rising costs. But they insisted that the Winter Games should continue, and Brundage stood down. As a cost-saving measure, they recommended going back to the 20s and 30s, when hockey and figure skating were held on outdoor rinks. Host cities didn't need to build an “indoor ice palace,” their report said.
One lasting idea that came out of this commission was the recommendation to hold the Winter Games on a different four-year cycle than the Summer Games, to give them more attention. This is the idea that the IOC later approved in 1986, when they instituted the new cycle for the Winter Games, starting in 1994.