IAAF boss Coe aims to ‘restore trust’

Paris, January 6

IAAF president Sebastian Coe on Tuesday set out his roadmap to “restore trust” in scandal-mired athletics, expressing his desire to transform track and field into a clean sport attractive to a younger population.

Athletics has been shaken to its core since Coe took over from Lamine Diack after the Beijing world championships in August. Russia was provisionally suspended from track and field over accusations of “state-sponsored” doping as the IAAF scrambled to salvage the sport’s credibility just nine months out from Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

Diack remains under French police investigation for corruption linked to doping cover-ups in world athletics. With that in mind, Coe said his roadmap “recognises problems in two distinct areas, in the governing body and in the sport itself, the consequence of which has been a breakdown of trust in athletics”.

“In addressing these problems, the roadmap importantly identifies the need for separate solutions,” he said. “To rebuild confidence, the IAAF must become an accountable, responsible and responsive organisation, while the sport must adopt a values-based culture where future athletes learn from clean athletes, coaches and officials.”

Coe commented: “Be under no illusion about how seriously I take these issues. I am president of an international federation which is under serious investigations and I represent a sport under intense scrutiny.” There will be greater accountability and vetting of IAAF officials and more transparency and communication from the independent IAAF Ethics Board.

Turning to competition, the roadmap envisages the establishment before Rio of a “separate integrity unit for athletics that ensures greater independence in reviewing key issues impacting upon the integrity of competition such as doping, corruption, betting and age manipulation”.

The anti-doping budget will

be doubled to $8 million allowing the current international testing pool of athletes to be doubled to 1,000 and probes into doping schemes in athletics involving athlete support personnel.