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Sports / Athletics

Coe rejects Sochi boycott suggestion

Published: 11 Aug 2013 - 12:27 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 11:10 pm

MOSCOW: Sebastian Coe’s life was changed by his 1,500m gold medal at the politically riven 1980 Olympics so it came as no surprise to hear him argue yesterday that a suggested boycott of next year’s Sochi Games was misplaced.

Coe, along with many other British athletes, defied a government call to boycott the Moscow Games in protest at the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and went on to win the 1,500 after surprisingly losing to compatriot Steve Ovett in his preferred 800.

Back at the same Luzhniki stadium for the athletics world championship 33 years later, Coe, an IAAF council member, dismissed calls for a boycott of the Sochi winter Olympics over Russia’s new anti-gay propaganda law.

“I am against boycotts. I don’t think they achieve what they set out to do. They harm only one group - the athletes,” said Coe, who headed the 2012 London Olympics and it widely tipped to be the next president of the International Association of Athletics Federations.

“International sport is not an inhibitor of social change, it actually has a catalytic effect.

“This stadium in a large part defined what I did in my athletics career and a large part of what I went on to do.

“I believed that coming to Moscow in 1980 was the right thing to do and 10 years later we saw those changes,” added Coe. REUTERS