January 11 - McDonald's is close to extending its sponsorship of the Olympics until 2020 in a $100 million (£65 million/€78 million) deal, it has been revealed here.
Gerhard Heiberg, the chairman of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Marketing Commission, hopes to seal the eight-year deal with the fast food giant during the Winter Youth Olympic Games which are due to start here on Friday (January 13).
"The situation is positive and I don't see any obstacle," Heiberg told Reuters.
"We are very close."
McDonald's current agreement with the IOC comes to an end after London 2012 and the new deal would extend their involvement in the Olympics which stretches back to Montreal in 1976.
It would cover Sochi 2014, Rio 2016 and Pyeongchang 2018 plus 2020, for which Baku, Doha, Istanbul, Madrid, Rome and Tokyo are bidding.
During the bid process for the 2016 Olympics and Paralympics there was controversy when John Lewicki, McDonald's senior director of alliance marketing, warned that the company would be more likely to renew its sponsorship deal with the IOC if they awarded the Games to Chicago, where they are based.
"The international market is very important to us, but some of the cities they are picking are not," said Lewicki.
"I'm not going to tell you if it's not Chicago, we won't renew, but if it is Chicago we probably will."
McDonald's was later forced to issue a clarification claiming that they were neutral in the race even though Andrew McKenna, the non-executive chairman of McDonald's, was co-chairman of fundraising for the Chicago 2016 campaign.
McDonald's are supporting the volunteer programme for London 2012 by helping train the Games Makers, as they will be known, and announcing plans for four outlets on the Olympic Park during the Games, including the biggest in the world.
The 3,000 square-metre (32,000 square-foot) two-story building in the Olympic Park will have 1,500 seats.
McDonald's plans to serve 1.75 million meals during the 29 day period of the Olympics and Paralympics.
McDonald's would join P&G, VISA, Omega, Dow Chemical, General Electric and Coca-Cola who already have sponsorship agreements through the 2020 Games.
Contact the writer of this story at duncan.mackay@insidethegames.biz
By Duncan Mackay
Source: www.insidethegames.biz
January 11 - The British Olympic Association's (BOA) two leading officials remain staunchly adamant about winning the fight to maintain their blanket Olympic ban on drugs cheats.
The BOA, Moynihan revealed, would not be content just with winning the high-profile case in March.
The organisers of the London 2012 Olympics marked Monday’s 200-day countdown to the start of the Games by confirming legacy plans for three of the event’s key competition venues.
January 10 - Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt (pictured) has spoken of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport's (DCMS) plans to encourage participation in sports up to and beyond this year's Olympics and Paralympics after the proposed new UK School Games received a massive injection of cash.
After revealing he used to work in his local Sainsbury's, Hunt said: "Seb spoke to me about sitting cross legged in a hall at school, watching the 1968 Olympics, 'and by the time I was back in that classroom', he said, 'I knew what I wanted to be'.
Hunt said: "The Olympic inspiration is not just for future champions.
January 9 - Australian Olympic cycling duo Patrick Jonker (pictured) and Stuart O'Grady have backed the British Olympic Association (BOA) lifetime ban for drug cheats, such as 2010 world time trial silver medallist David Millar, and believe that the same ruling should apply in their country.
O'Grady (pictured left with Millar) agreed with Jonker despite admitting that the issue was certainly a complex one.
"The current WADA policy of a serious doping offence just leading to a two-year ban is sending out absolutely the wrong message to young people across the world," he said.