MILAN selected Seconds after Rio de Janeiro as host of the 2016 Olympics, Venice mayor Massimo Cacciari seized the chance to put his famous but unlikely city in the frame for 2020.
A Madrid Games straight after London 2012 would almost certainly have ended any hope of a third straight European victor, but Rio’s win over the Spanish capital opened the door.
“Venice is an iconic city, unique in the world, which enjoys universal recognition,” Cacciari told Reuters while Rio’s bid team were still jumping up and down in delight at the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Congress in Copenhagen earlier this month.
Fearing Venice had stolen a march and captured the public’s imagination by planning the world’s greatest sporting event in the northern city of canals, other Italian bidders quickly registered their interest.
Officials in Rome, Summer Games host in 1960, confirmed they would look to bid, having already indicated a willingness if Madrid missed out on 2016. Palermo and rumblings of a proposal from southern city Bari followed.
Rather than get excited by the enthusiasm of his countrymen, Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) president Gianni Petrucci scratched his head at the rash nature of it all.
“This doesn’t look good abroad. It’s not enough just to hold a news conference to put yourselves forward for an Olympics,” he told reporters.
“There are as many Italian cities bidding as there are pizzas in Naples.”
Italy can have only one bid for 2020 so Petrucci must now whittle down the contenders while hoping no more cities announce their candidature without telling him.
PROVINCIAL CITIES
The biggest difficulty for Venice, Bari and Palermo is convincing Petrucci their cities are big enough to be hosts.
Sicily’s capital Palermo is the largest of the three with around 658,000 inhabitants but no city so small has held the Summer Games in modern times.
Hotels and transport links are two of the major hurdles the city would have to overcome to convince Petrucci, let alone the IOC when a decision is made on the 2020 hosts in four years’ time.
Following on from Rio becoming the first South American country to win the Games, the Italian hopefuls believe the time for smaller cities has arrived — especially with the economic crisis forcing London 2012 to downsize plans slightly.
Support for the view that the Olympics can be done on a budget and not necessarily in a mega-city has come from a potential rival.
Japanese provincial cities Hiroshima and Nagasaki want to bid jointly for 2020 as a sign of solidarity for a nuclear-free world following the atomic bombs which destroyed them in 1945.
Their proposal shows that wanting to host the Games offers marketing benefits even if a city never comes close to winning.
