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Yesterday β€” 24 June 2026Main stream

Olympians are finally getting paid by the IOC, just not for winning

Olympic athletes can now apply for $10,000 cash grants from a new fund created by the International Olympic Committee, which will set aside $140 million each four-year Olympic cycle.

Athletes from any country who compete in the summer or winter Olympics are eligible to apply for the grant within six months of competition, regardless of how they performed at the Games, provided they have not tested positive for doping or otherwise violated the Olympic charter. Olympians who competed at the 2026 Milano Cortina Games will be the first to benefit from the new fund, followed by athletes at the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

IOC president Kirsty Coventry announced the initiative at the organization's annual strategy meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland on Wednesday, June 24, one year after she took office.

"We found a way to directly support all Olympians, and that is a priority," Coventry said. "I think part of what we do in this movement is we pave the way forward for those that are coming behind us."

Former NBA star Pau Gasol, chair of the IOC Athletes' Commission, said that athletes will apply for the grant through the IOC's existing online business platform called Athlete365.

"We're showing the athletes that we are thinking of them and that we're going above and beyond to make sure that they're receiving as much value as we can give them," Gasol said. "They are the heart of our movement."

The IOC does not award prize money at the Olympics, though some countries choose to pay athletes for medal wins. Coventry faced backlash from athletes earlier this year for saying she opposed paying prize money, but on Wednesday said she'd been working on this initiative since she assumed the presidency.

Olympians can use the grant money to continue their sports careers or transition to another career. If an athlete chooses not to apply for the grant, that money will remain in the fund to be available for other Olympians.

The grant will be available even to athletes in sports like men's soccer and basketball who make lucrative salaries from their careers, Gasol said.

The IOC's Olympic Solidarity program, which already provides scholarships to athletes from less wealthy countries, will manage distribution of the grants. Coventry said the IOC arrived at the $10,000 figure by doubling the $5,000 scholarship typically allotted to athletes for each Olympic qualification event.

The fund is not available to athletes in the Paralympic movement, which is governed separately by the International Paralympic Committee.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: IOC launches $10,000 cash grant fund for every Olympic athlete

Before yesterdayMain stream

IOC approves French Alps 2030 Winter Olympics city events in Lyon, speed skating in Netherlands

The 2030 French Alps Winter Olympics figure skating, hockey, short track and curling events will be held in Lyon, while the IOC Executive Board also approved speed skating to be in the Netherlands, which would make it the first Winter Games to include competition in multiple countries.

Figure skating, hockey, short track and curling were originally planned to be in Nice.

Allianz Riviera Stadium, where Nice’s Ligue 1 soccer team plays, was planned to be covered and used as a hockey venue, but French media reported in the spring that an agreement hadn’t been reached, leading organizers to consider other cities for ice sports, including Lyon and Paris, which is farther north.

Using Lyon "supports a more compact overall Games footprint and enables significant cost efficiencies, while maintaining a high-quality competition and athlete experience," according to the IOC.

The original French Alps 2030 bid plan from 2023 did not include a speed skating venue as the country doesn't have a speed skating arena.

Organizers proposed using Thialf β€” the only arena in speed skating-crazed Netherlands β€” that's considered the sport's equivalent of Wrigley Field or Fenway Park.

The IOC board approved Thialf pending completion of organizing committee discussions with venue owners.

The only other times multiple countries have hosted competition at one Olympics were in the Summer Games.

In 1956, Melbourne hosted the Olympics and had equestrian events in Stockholm due to quarantine laws in Australia. Similarly, equestrian at the 2008 Beijing Games was held in Hong Kong. In 2024, Tahiti held surfing events for the Paris Games.

Thialf, in Heerenveen, is about 500 miles north of Lyon.

Alpine skiing at the 2030 French Alps Games will be shared by Courchevel and Val d’IsΓ¨re, two annual stops on the World Cup circuit.

A fully integrated venue plan, including the detailed allocation of sports and disciplines, will be announced at a later date.

Bobsled Lake Placid
The U.S. last hosted the Winter Games in 2002 and will do so again in 2034 in Salt Lake City.

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