The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) on Monday acknowledged a battle to convince sponsors that it is confronting doping and corruption scandals amid reports it has already lost Adidas as a backer.
The BBC said that the German sportswear giant is to end its multimillion-dollar backing of the governing body four years early because of the doping scandal that has hit track and field.
Contacted by reporters on Monday, an Adidas spokeswoman neither confirmed nor denied the BBC report, but stressed that the company was “opposed to doping in any form.”
Photo: AP
“We are therefore in close contact with IAAF to learn more about the reform process,” she added.
“The IAAF is in close contact with all its sponsors and partners as we embark on our reform process,” an IAAF spokesman said.
The federation got one sign of backing from Dentsu, the Japanese media giant that has the marketing and licensing rights to IAAF events.
The IAAF and Dentsu “are in close and regular contact on all commercial matters and, as part of such communication, Dentsu’s executive officer Kiyoshi Nakamura has expressed that ‘we have full confidence in the new leadership of the IAAF and the reform process being led by current IAAF president Sebastian Coe,’” an IAAF statement said.
“’The IAAF world athletics series remains an important property within Dentsu’s global sports business portfolio,’” Nakamura was quoted as saying.
Coe went to Tokyo last month to meet Dentsu and key sponsors and Nakamura said his presentation was “extremely well received.”
However, the BBC said Adidas has told the IAAF it was withdrawing from its agreement after a World Anti-Doping Agency report published in November last year that detailed claims of “state-sponsored doping” within Russia.
A second report released this month said “corruption was embedded” within the IAAF under former president Lamine Diack, now facing criminal charges in France.
The BBC said that led Adidas to terminate its agreement, with officials at the company telling the IAAF of its decision this week.
According to the BBC, Adidas believes the doping revelations constitute noncompliance of its agreement with the IAAF.
Adidas’ 11-year sponsorship deal was signed in 2008 and was due to run until 2019.
At the time it was agreed, the deal was reported to be worth US$33 million. However, the BBC, citing anonymous sources, said the figure was worth about US$8 million this year alone.
On those figures, the projected lost revenue for the IAAF over the next four years will be US$30 million.
Adidas’ move will add to the pressure on Coe, who succeeded Diack in August last year, having been one of his vice presidents for seven years.
Senior management at Adidas have also voiced their concerns at the corruption surrounding FIFA, although the company remains a commercial partner of soccer’s scandal-tainted governing body.
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