Sebastian Coe beats Sergey Bubka to become IAAF chief

Sport360 staff 09:29 19/08/2015
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  • New president: Sebastian Coe.

    Britain’s Sebastian Coe beat Sergey Bubka in a tight vote to become the new president of the IAAF on Wednesday at a time when the world athletics body is battling a series of doping controversies.

    Coe won 115 votes from the 207 voting member federations that make up the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), with Ukraine’s Bubka receiving 92.

    Coe takes over from Lamine Diack, the 82-year-old Senegalese who is stepping down after 16 years in charge at the IAAF Congress in Beijing.

    “In the best traditions of everything in what we believe in our sport, it was fought according to sound judgment throughout,” Coe said in the Chinese capital.

    “For most of us in this room, we would conclude that the birth of our children is a big moment in our lives, probably the biggest, but I have to say that being given the opportunity to work with all of you and shape the future of our sport is probably the second biggest and (most) momentous occasion of my life.”

    Coe added that he would now be reacquainting himself with his wife after months of international lobbying. “I will be meeting her outside the main congress with a photo of me just to remind her of what I look like.”

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    Diack said that track and field would prosper with Coe, who was a two-time Olympic 1500m gold medallist for Britain in 1980 and 1984 and also set eight outdoor and three indoor world records in middle-distance track events.

    “Our sport is in safe hands,” Diack said.  “The white-haired generation has done what it can, now it’s over to the black-haired generation.”

    Coe’s first job as IAAF president will be to defend athletics from stinging allegations of widespread doping which threaten to cast a dark cloud over the world championships which kick off on Saturday in Beijing.

    The credibility of both athletics and the IAAF has come under repeated attack in recent weeks, after British and German media said a leaked database of 12,000 tests had revealed “extraordinary” levels of doping.

    The IAAF slammed the allegations as “sensationalist and confusing” and also dismissed a later Sunday Times report that it blocked the publication of a document showing extensive doping among top athletes.

    Last week, the world body provisionally suspended 28 athletes for suspected doping offences at the 2005 and 2007 world championships; although most have now retired and none had been due to compete at the world championships in Beijing, starting Saturday.

    But doping issues will feature prominently at the Bird’s Nest stadium when US sprinter Justin Gatlin, twice banned for drugs but now in the form of his life aged 33, takes on Jamaican superstar Usain Bolt in the 100m on the opening weekend.

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