Diack
believes he is leaving the IAAF in good financial shape
|
By Piers Edwards BBC Africa sport
Senegal's Lamine Diack
will formally end his 16-year reign at the helm of athletics' governing body,
the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), on 31 August. He will hand over thebaton to Lord Coe of Britain, who will become only the sixth man to lead the
IAAF in its 103-year history.
Lord Coe
will be the sixth man to lead the IAAF
|
Diack,
now 82, was vice-president when his predecessor Primo Nebiolo died of a heart
attack in 1999. After becoming acting president, he went on to stand unopposed
in four subsequent elections.
A
former long jumper whose 1960 Olympic dreams were dashed by injury, he has been
involved in athletics for most of his life - but what is his legacy as IAAF
president?
BBC report continues:
Unfortunately,
his departure could not have come at a worse time, given that he leaves an
organisation fighting for credibility in the face of incessant doping allegations.
'Greatest gift'
Earlier
this month, German broadcaster ARD and the UK's Sunday Times newspaper claimed
that between 2001 and 2012, a third of medals in endurance events at the
Olympics and World Championships were won by athletes who recorded suspicious
blood tests.
On
Monday, the IAAF was then forced to deny it had vetoed publication of a report
that suggested that 29% to 34% of athletes at the 2011 World Championships had
knowingly doped.
So
it spoke volumes when one of the first pledges made by Coe upon his election
was to protect clean athletes and rebuild trust by maintaining a "zero
tolerance to the abuse of doping in my sport".
Nonetheless,
Diack has preferred to focus on the positives when questioned on his legacy in
recent weeks.
His
proudest achievement appears to be vastly improving the IAAF's finances, so
building on the presidency of Nebiolo, whose at-times controversial reign
coincided with the establishment of the biennial world championships and a
lucrative grand prix circuit.
"Long-term
financial security ... is the greatest gift I can pass on to my successor as
president," he told AFP in an interview this week.
Another
area that will please the Senegalese is his success in making athletics
universal, which wasn't the case when he joined the IAAF in the 1970s.
The
first World Championships, in 1983, attracted 154 countries, whereas 207
nations will be in Beijing for Saturday's showpiece event.
The
grand prix have also grown, morphing into the Golden League (1998-2009) before
becoming the Diamond League five years ago - with the stated aim of taking
athletics outside Europe, with Asia, the Middle East and the US all on the list
of venues.
Interestingly,
Diack did admit to the lack of a proper bidding process when the IAAF largely
bypassed convention in April by awarding the 2021 World Championships to the US
for the first time.
"Blame
it on an old president on the eve of his departure who wanted to give this
opportunity to the United States," said a man who has long wanted to
spread athletics in the US.
That
aside, and to its great credit, the IAAF has been ahead of other sports bodies
in terms of paying out equal prize money, but critics have questioned the
Diamond League's ability to transcend athletics.
'Cheats'
Among
the laudable creations under Diack are the relatively simple, such as the Kids'
Athletics initiative (which reached 1.5 million children across 100 territories
in the first six years of its existence), to the very complicated, namely the
war on doping.
Ironically,
the IAAF has often been at the forefront of the war on drugs.
The
organization was one of the first sports bodies to implement the Athletes
Biological Passport, as well as the storing of blood samples to use for
re-analysis in future years (when the science has caught up with the cheats).
But
these anti-doping actions have now been used against the IAAF and Diack, who
has given the allegations short shrift (despite admitting to a 'crisis' in the
past) and highlighted a host of initiatives instead.
Kenya's
Rita Jeptoo has been at the centre of doping allegations
|
But
as the questions abound about the way in which the IAAF publicizes its findings
or doesn't - for the critics who say the IAAF fears it would damage the sport
by so doing - Diack is seen as the man who has allowed the stench to come about
on his watch.
Not
that the former mayor of Dakar sees it that way of course, believing his sport
is handling the problem.
"I
have said on many occasions that when the day comes where we no longer can
believe what we see, then sport is dead," he was quoted as saying this
week.
The problem for Diack as he
leaves the highest position in athletics is that too many believe that day has
already arrived in his beloved sport.
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