Olympic sports bodies eager to speak with IOC after cricket, others added to 2028 program
Olympic sports bodies want urgent talks with the International Olympic Committee about the risk of cuts in their revenue shares and medal events at the 2028 Los Angeles Games because cricket and other newcomers were added to the program.
The IOC last month approved cricket, baseball/softball, flag football, lacrosse and squash for 2028 and kept boxing, modern pentathlon and weightlifting — three sports whose status had been in doubt.
The umbrella group of current Summer Games sports, known by the acronym ASOIF, said Monday the decision to increase to a record 36 sports "has raised several questions" among its members, who collectively shared $540 million US of IOC-allocated money at each of the past two Olympics.
Most Olympic sports received between $13 million and $17.3 million from the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Games in 2021. For some, that was about half their total income over four years.
Adding four team sports in 2028 also is set to break the IOC's preferred limit of 10,500 athletes at a Summer Games and likely will put pressure on the core Olympic sports to cut their quotas of athletes or even medal events. The IOC has set a target of early 2025 to confirm final quotas.
On Monday, ASOIF's ruling council agreed "to raise these urgent matters with the IOC leadership" after meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland.
The council includes the presidents World Athletics, International Gymnastics Federation and World Aquatics, the top-tier Olympic sports.
Track and field was given $38.5 million after the Tokyo Games, while gymnastics and swimming each was handed about $31.4 million of the IOC's total revenue from broadcasters and sponsors of $7.6 billion from 2017-21. Adding cricket is expected to raise the IOC's broadcast deal in


