IOC chief paves the way for football - Olympics - Evening Standard
       

IOC chief paves the way for football

OLYMPICS chief Jacques Rogge has said that London's main Olympic stadium does not need an athletics legacy after all.

He revealed he was more concerned that the 2012 Games should not leave behind any "white elephants".

An athletics legacy was a key plank of the original bid and Mr Rogge's words appear to mark a shift in International Olympics Committee policy and open the door for a football club
moving to the Stratford venue.

The £525 million stadium has been the focus of a battle between the organisers of the London Games and Mayor Boris Johnson. But IOC chief Mr Rogge said: "If the best solution is to transform the track into something else then we would be in favour of that.

"We had the same situation in Atlanta where the Olympic Stadium was changed into a baseball stadium, which kept an interest for sport."

The Mayor's advisers believe it could be cheaper in the long run to build a stadium in partnership with a football club than subsidise it as an athletics venue. However, Mr Rogge's remarks will disappoint 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe who has said the Stratford venue would be a "stadium with track and field as its primary legacy".

UK Athletics, the sport's national governing body, is keen to use the stadium as a community athletics centre that could also stage national and international events. The original London 2012 statement said: "We have always said we want the stadium to be a multi-sport venue for elite and community use, with athletics an important part of that mix."

The London Development Agency could now ditch the original plan to turn the 80,000-capacity stadium into an athletics venue holding 25,000 people.

British Olympics chiefs have met potential "anchor tenants" but talks with London-based football and rugby clubs have faltered over the issue of keeping an athletics element.

Mr Rogge's words could lead to a rethink by West Ham, whose talks with 2012 chiefs about a move to the stadium broke down two years ago.

Tottenham Hotspur sources say they would not rule out a move to Stratford if the price was right.

League One side Leyton Orient, the closest professional sports team to the site, are in talks with London 2012.

Comments

Don't Miss
TV Baftas - in pictures

Best of the Baftas

Stars on the red, white and blue carpet
What makes Chelsea and Arsenal target Eden Hazard tick?

Hazard warning

What makes Chelsea and Arsenal target Eden Hazard tick?
You big softie: Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?

You big softie

Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?
Pop star Paloma Faith, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video

Gay marriage

Pop star, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video
Promethipedia: the lowdown on Ridley Scott's new blockbuster Prometheus

Promethipedia

The lowdown on Ridley Scott's new blockbuster Prometheus
Prints charming: patterned trousers for summer

Prints charming

Patterned trousers for summer
Bob Geldof on grandchildren, activism and the state of music

Grandpa Bob

Bob Geldof on grandchildren, activism and the state of music
The Middletan: Kate Middleton has the most requested tan in London

The Middletan

Kate Middleton has the most requested tan in London
Amy Childs bares all like Britney

Dare to bare

Amy Childs vajazzles like Britney
Trip the bright fantastic - in vertiginous neon

Fashion

Trip the bright fantastic - in vertiginous neon