Olympics: Winter Games won't move for Qatar World Cup, says OCA boss

Olympics: Winter Games won't move for Qatar World Cup, says OCA boss

BANGKOK - Asia's Olympic chief ruled out rescheduling the 2022 Winter Olympics to avoid the Qatar World Cup on Thursday as moves gather pace to shift football's showpiece to a cooler time of year.

Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, head of Asia's Olympic body and the worldwide Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC), said he was sure the two events would not clash.

But, speaking to reporters during an ANOC meeting in Bangkok, the highly influential Kuwaiti said the World Cup had to fit in around the Winter Olympics, and not the other way round.

"I think the Olympics should be maintained because we don't have a problem. This is a FIFA issue, not an IOC (International Olympic Committee) issue," Sheikh Ahmad said.

"For that (reason) I believe the IOC will stick with their time because it already has been committed and the broadcaster has been committed, the broadcasting, all the marketing partners, the NOCs.

"I don't think anything will touch the Olympics. FIFA should be flexible in choosing - this is my advice - which is the best date." The timing of the Qatar World Cup is becoming increasingly fraught after football world body FIFA supported the idea of holding it in winter to avoid the desert state's blazing summer months.

Suggested timings for the month-long tournament range from November to February, raising fears of a clash with the 2022 Winter Olympics, which will be in Beijing or the Kazakh capital Almaty.

Major football leagues oppose a winter World Cup and a January-February timing would also conflict with America's NFL, whose Super Bowl takes place in early February.

Sheikh Ahmad said a commission led by Asian football chief Shaikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa was looking at dates for Qatar's World Cup, already controversial over the bidding process and human rights issues.

"I think they will analyse this and they will try to find the best solution, how they will make it without touching each other, keeping the interests of each and respect the period of each game or event," Sheikh Ahmad said.

"We don't have to be in a hurry. Somebody's speaking about January, February before the Games, somebody's talking about November and somebody's asking to keep it in August.

"We have to respect opinions, let the commission do their homework, but I'm 100 per cent confident they will never be in the same time. There will be respect for the time of each event."

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