Following
extensive global campaigning by the World Squash Federation since the
sport narrowly missed out being added to the London 2012 programme, the WSF
has received news from the IOC that Squash has been included on the
shortlist of sports under consideration for the 2016 Olympic Games.
In a letter
to Jahangir Khan, IOC Sports Director Christophe Dubi
congratulated and thanked the WSF President "most sincerely for the
tremendous work you accomplished in order to complete the questionnaire for
IOC Recognised International Federations".
Squash has
been selected along with Baseball, Golf, Karate, Roller Sports, Rugby and
Softball.
Played by
around 15 million enthusiasts on all five continents, Squash has been
vigorously campaigning to join the Olympic Games programme for many years.
In 2005,
Squash was voted into the London 2012 Olympic Games ahead of Karate, Roller
Sports, Rugby and Golf - but then failed to achieve the two-thirds majority
required to become ratified as an Olympic sport.
"I am
confident that the reason why Squash was chosen ahead of other sports in 2005
is down to its image as an intensely athletic, healthy, universal, inclusive
and exciting world sport," said the WSF President. "This image is the result
of decades of positive development."
Khan was
delighted to receive the IOC letter, only days after being the final
torchbearer in the Beijing Olympic Torch Relay in Islamabad, the
capital of his home country Pakistan.
"This is
truly excellent news for our sport," said one of the sport's most
distinguished players, with six World Open titles and record ten
British Open trophies to his name. "We will be working very hard to
convince the IOC that Squash deserves a place on the Olympic Programme."
Following the
2005 IOC meeting in Singapore, the WSF lobbied for a change in the Olympic
charter which would reduce from two-thirds to a simple majority the voting
policy for ratification as an Olympic sport - thus aligning the threshold
with the existing policy for Olympic sports. This decision was duly taken at
the IOC session in Guatemala in July 2007.
Squash
presents a compelling case for inclusion on the Olympic Programme after
experiencing significant global growth since being voted the No1 sport at the
2005 IOC Session in Singapore:
-
Squash is
primarily a ‘participant sport’, as the vast majority of people associated
with it actually play, leading to real health/recreational benefits to
society
-
The sport is
played by an estimated 15 million people in over 155 countries - with more
than a quarter million registered athletes, plus over 600 professional
athletes.
-
Juniors are
an area of rapid growth: The 2008 World Men's Junior Championships in
Switzerland boast a record entry. The WSF has not only recently decided to
make its World Junior Championships an annual event due to demand, but will
also create a new Juniors Committee and a global ranking system. The
flourishing European Junior Circuit featured 20 tournaments in 17 different
countries in the 2006/07 season, with a record number of entries.
-
Squash
enjoys a solid spread of talent: All continents were represented in the top
six positions at the 2007 World Men’s Team Championship and top 11 at the
World Women’s Team Championship in 2006.
-
The WSF now
has 138 Member Nation Federations (up from 125 in 2004) and more than 80% of
all MNFs organise an Annual National Championship across gender and all age
groups
-
Women
account for approximately 30% of all recreational players and 37% of
professional athletes. Furthermore the WSF board boasts a 60/40 male/female
breakdown.
-
The sport is
played in over 20 multi-sport Games including the World Games, All-Africa
Games, Asian Games, Pan American Games, Commonwealth Games (in which it has
been named as a 'core sport'), World University Championships and World
Masters Games. This compares to just two events in 1991!
-
Squash is
also a “high value” sport for Organising Committees as facilities required
for an Olympic event are both economical and temporary.
-
TV
production technology has developed positively in the past few years - and
Squash is now regularly featured on TV in more than 125 countries across all
continents
-
Web
streaming has taken off over the past three years: The last two World
Championships each reached audiences in over 75 countries while PSALIVE.tv
has over 30,000 paid subscribers in only two years of operation.