Tickets sales for the Rio de Janeiro Paralympic Games are lagging, but they are getting a big boost from an unexpected source — the city of Rio de Janeiro.
International Paralympic Committee (IPC) president Philip Craven said in an interview that 33 percent of 2.5 million tickets had been sold, compared with 67 percent of 6 million Olympic tickets.
He said the city government of Rio de Janeiro was buying a large chunk of Paralympic tickets. He estimated about 500,000, a number city hall declined to confirm.
In a statement, it said it was buying tickets “for students of municipal schools,” but did not give a number.
The plans were scheduled to be announced yesterday, the day the countdown clock reached 100 days for the Paralympics.
Two years ago at the soccer World Cup, Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes criticized expensive ticket prices that shut out many residents of Rio, which has a stark divide between the rich and poor.
Paes promised at the time to give away 1.2 million tickets for the Olympics, but failed to deliver. This is partly because the purchase price could have reached US$10 million to US$15 million.
Local Olympic organizers said they could not afford to give away tickets due to a tight operating budget that depends on ticket sales income.
The price tag for the Paralympics should be much lower, perhaps in the range of US$1 million to US$2 million. This is because Paralympic tickets are much cheaper and the city seems to be buying far fewer.
The Paralympic Games seem to have avoided the problems with doping that are dogging the Olympics.
“We don’t believe we’ve got a major problem in positive doping results, but it’s something we’re watching very, very closely,” Craven said.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced recently that up to 55 athletes have tested positive for doping in a reanalysis of samples from the past two Summer Olympics.
The IOC maintains samples of previous Games for 10 years.
Craven said the IPC only began storing samples starting with the 2012 Paralympics in London.
“We have a very, very low count on positive tests,” he said. “However, our standpoint on this is that we fully support the actions of the IOC and WADA [World Anti-Doping Agency] with regard to the retesting.”
Craven is working to stir up interest in the Paralympic Games, which open on Sept. 7 — two-and-a-half weeks after the Olympics close.
The Paralympics have about 4,350 athletes compared with 10,500 for the main event, but face the same problems: the outbreak of the Zika virus in Brazil, security worries and water pollution in venues.
Brazil is also mired in its worst recession since the 1930s, with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff suspended and awaiting an impeachment trial.
“Rio is on the verge of staging a fantastic Paralympic Games, despite all the difficulties that the nation and the organizing committee and the IOC and IPC have had to go through,” Craven said. “This is where I think we will see sport pull together.”
“I am fully confident that Rio 2016 will be the best ever in terms of athletic performance, going beyond what we saw in London four years ago,” he added.
Craven has been using a wheelchair since a fall 50 years ago — at age 16 — in a rock-climbing accident that left him a paraplegic.
“One second I was standing on a cliff, and the next second the legs didn’t work,” Craven said in a separate interview last year. “When somebody pats you on the shoulder because you are in a bloody wheelchair; gosh, that gets me mad to this day.”
To express the Paralympic attitude, he quoted an Australian wheelchair basketball player.
“Paralympians don’t have the time to worry about what doesn’t work, they just maximize what does,” he said. “This is a signal to everyone to maximize your capabilities and don’t worry too much about what you’ve not got. Maximize what you’ve got.”
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