International Olympic Day: ICC chairman Jay Shah celebrates cricket's historic return, urges everyone to join the 'let's move' campaign | Cricket News

International Olympic Day: ICC chairman Jay Shah celebrates cricket’s historic return, urges everyone to join the ‘let’s move’ campaign | Cricket News

File photo of ICC chairman Jay Shah. (Getty Images) ICC Chairman Jay Shah and BCCI celebrated International Olympic Day on June 23, commemorating cricket’s return to the Olympics while promoting the ‘Let’s Move?’ campaign that encourages people to take steps towards a healthier lifestyle by inviting others to participate in physical activities.The Olympic Day marks the founding of modern Olympic Games in 1894 and is celebrated globally each year on June 23 to promote sport and physical activity.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!“Cricket has always united us, and now, it’s part of the Olympic movement! On this #OlympicDay, let’s celebrate the power of sport to inspire, connect, and uplift. Invite your +1 for a walk, a run, or a game of cricket, and take a step towards a stronger, healthier India. Together, let’s keep moving forward on our journey to bring the Olympic Games home!” Shah shared on social media.The ‘Let’s Move?’ campaign encourages everyone to invite a “+1” to participate in activities like walking, running, dancing, or skipping, and share their experiences on social media using @Olympics #LetsMove.“Cricket has joined the Olympic movement- a historic leap for our beloved sport! This #OlympicDay, let’s celebrate the power of sports to connect and inspire. Through the #LetsMove campaign, we invite you to pick your +1 and move – whether it’s a walk, a run, or a game of cricket. Together, we can build a healthier, more united India, because when we move together, we move better. Let’s make our dream a reality – Olympics in India!” BCCI posted on social media.Cricket will return to the Olympics at Los Angeles 2028, after its only previous appearance at the Paris Games in 1900. The sport was included following an IOC meeting in Mumbai in October 2023.Cricket joins other new sports at LA28 including baseball/softball, flag football, lacrosse, and squash. Jasprit Bumrah press conference: Lashes out at critics, dropped catches and no balls Cricket at the LA Olympics will feature six teams each in men’s and women’s competitions. The T20 format has been featured in other multi-sport events, including the Asian Games in 2010, 2014, and 2023 for both men’s and women’s competitions, and the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games for women’s competition.

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International Olympic Day: Juan Antonio Samaranch Senior - The controversial figure who saved the Olympics | More sports News

International Olympic Day: Juan Antonio Samaranch Senior – The controversial figure who saved the Olympics | More sports News

Juan Antonio Samaranch Sr. helmed the IOC for 21 years (1980 until 2001) and saved it from financial ruin. (Image: X/IOCMedia) International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) incoming president Kirsty Coventry and outgoing president Thomas Bach will honour each other at Monday’s handover ceremony in Paris, with both acknowledging Juan Antonio Samaranch Senior’s crucial role in saving the Olympic movement from potential extinction, transforming it into a financially robust organisation during his presidency from 1980 to 2001.Coventry and Samaranch Senior share a background of serving in controversial regimes before their IOC roles. Coventry served as sports and arts minister in Zimbabwe’s government, whose 2023 election was deemed unfair by international observers, while Samaranch held a high position in General Francisco Franco’s fascist Spanish regime.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Samaranch Senior’s presidency faced scrutiny during the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics votes-for-favours scandal, yet his contributions to the Olympic movement remain significant.“His legacy is that we have an Olympic Games to talk about,” former IOC marketing executive Terrence Burns told AFP. “He saved it from financial and political ruin.”After Franco’s death and Spain’s return to monarchy, Samaranch Senior became ambassador to the Soviet Union, acknowledging his political career in Spain had ended. He consistently maintained he was not a fascist.His election as IOC president occurred during the 1980 Moscow Games, which were affected by boycotts following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.Former IOC marketing chief Michael Payne emphasised Samaranch’s impact: “Within the IOC I think the Samaranch legacy is fully understood: that he saved the Olympic Movement.”Payne highlighted Samaranch’s success in developing the business model, including television strategy and the TOP programme, which became the most successful sports marketing program ever.According to Payne, Samaranch Senior was more introverted than his son, who recently finished second to Coventry in the IOC presidential election.“He was very introverted, a great listener, didn’t do a lot of talking, and a great strategic thinker,” said Payne. “But because he wasn’t at the forefront, communicating and explaining, he was often misunderstood. He only learned English as his third or fourth language when he was 60.”Samaranch’s leadership during the Salt Lake City scandal demonstrated his resilience, resulting in six members’ expulsion and implementation of reform measures.“He was calm under unbelievable pressure and stress,” Payne recalled. “Honestly, you went to the office every day and you didn’t know if the organisation would survive… And that was for three months. It was brutal. And yet, Samaranch Senior displayed absolute calm, focus.”In a rare moment of vulnerability, Samaranch told the Los Angeles Times in 2000: “Retiring myself after the Barcelona Games (in 1992), I could have been a hero, no? I cannot regret. I have to write my history again.”Samaranch demonstrated his tough negotiating skills when Greece opposed the Olympic torch lighting for the 1984 Los Angeles Games due to commercialisation concerns.“Samaranch sent one of his relatives to Olympia to privately film the lighting of the flame, put it in a miner’s lamp, and brought it back to Lausanne,” Payne revealed. “Then Samaranch called the Greeks and said, ‘just for you to understand, I now have the Olympic flame on my desk. Either you will agree to let the Americans come and properly light it or there will never be another torch lighting in Olympia. Because it will be lit at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne.‘ So he wasn’t shy of being very tough.”

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