Boston mayor Marty Walsh expressed confidence in his city’s candidacy for a potential 2024 U.S. Olympic bid on Tuesday, after meeting with the U.S. Olympic Committee and officials from other candidate cities last week in Colorado Springs, Colo.
A Boston Public Radio host asked Walsh, “How would you describe your position in this today?”
“I think Boston’s in a very good position,” Walsh said.
And Walsh’s position?
“I’m supportive of it,” he said. “I’m supportive of advancing and moving forward. We still have a lot of work to do. We still have to talk to the public. We have to get feedback in. It’s very early in this negotiation.”
Boston is one of four U.S. cities in the running for a 2024 Olympic bid, should the USOC decide to make a bid. The others are Los Angeles, the only city in the quartet to have previously hosted an Olympics, and San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
The USOC has said it likely won’t decide if it will bid for the 2024 Olympics until after an International Olympic Committee session in December.
The U.S. hasn’t hosted a Summer Olympics since Atlanta 1996 (its last Winter Games were Salt Lake City 2002). Paris, Rome and a South African city, among others, have been discussed as international bids.
Walsh said the next steps for Boston would be an internal briefing, then having conversations in the community.
“I’m not going to mortgage the future of the city of Boston for an Olympic bid, there’s no question about it,” Walsh said. “It’s a very interesting idea, a very interesting proposal. I learned a lot down in Colorado Springs about what’s expected of the city, really talking about going for the international bid [the IOC votes on the host city in 2017]. That really was what the main discussion was down there. We still have a long way to go to see if we are in the running. I think we are in the running, actually.”
Walsh expanded on the conversations with the USOC in Colorado Springs in an interview with the Boston Business Journal.
“We asked questions around marketing, the Olympic brand and about how other past bids have gone, what went wrong and why the U.S. didn’t get chosen in the past,” Walsh said. “There are still lots of unanswered questions, and it’s still three years away, but I’m excited.”
USOC chairman ‘more optimistic than ever’ about 2024 U.S. bid