Kuwait’s Al-Reshidi qualifies for 2020 Tokyo Olympics

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Kuwait’s Mansour Al-Reshidi with Duaij Al-Otaibi, President of Kuwait shooting federation.

Athlete body says NOCs should lead on sponsorship freedom

ABU DHABI, April 16, (Agencies): Kuwait’s Mansour Al-Reshidi won the Skeet Men’s final at the 2019 ISSF World Cup, held in Al-Ain City on Monday, and qualified for the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan.

Al-Reshidi shot 56 targets to finish atop of the podium. In the qualification he hit 123 out of 125 targets.

Denmarks Jesper Hansen hit 122 targets in qualification to proceed to the final after a four man shoot-off for one place. In the final he hit 54 targets to win the Silver medal.

Luke Peter Argiro from Australia shot a perfect 125 out of 125 targets and equaled the Qualification World Record. In the final he hit 42 targets to finish with the Bronze medal.

President of Kuwait Shooting Federation Duaij Al-Otaibi, speaking to KUNA following the victory, said Al-Reshidi was the second shooter qualified for the Tokyo Olympics following Abdulrahman Al-Faihan, who won the Trap final in the World Cup in South Korea last September.

He said Kuwait was the first Arab country qualifying for the Olympic Games in Tokyo.

In the medal standing for current World Cup, first place went to US, second to Germany, with Croatia, France and Kuwait sharing third place.

Also:

LONDON: National Olympic Comm-ittees should take the lead in helping athletes win more freedom to promote their personal sponsors during Games, the head of the Global Athlete movement said on Monday.

Rule 40 of the Olympic charter states that participants in the Olympic Games cannot allow their “person, name, picture or sports performances to be used for advertising purposes during the Olympic Games.”

The German Cartel Office ruled in February, however, that the IOC and German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) were subject to competition laws and must grant more rights for promotional activities ahead of and during the Games.

The ruling only applies in Germany and IOC President Thomas Bach was quoted as saying at the weekend that other athletes should talk directly to their National Olympic Committee (NOC) or federation.

“We welcome the fact that the IOC is now starting to raise this issue, which has long been on the minds of the overwhelming majority of Olympic athletes,” said Global Athlete director general Rob Koehler.

“This is a first step to recognising the growing mood among the athlete community to have their marketing and commercial rights liberated at an Olympic Games.”

Koehler told Reuters that he would have preferred the IOC to put the onus on NOCs rather than leaving it up to athletes who lacked the staff and time.

“I would have liked to see it flipped around a little bit saying ‘responsibility on the NOCs to see what we can do to help you athletes’,” he said.

The insidethegames.biz website quoted Bach on Sunday as telling the International Athletes’ Forum in Lausanne that there was no one-size-fits-all solution.

“What we are doing now is actively contacting NOCs and starting talks advising them of what we agreed after the DOSB negotiated this with the Cartel Office in Germany. We will find out what it means for them,” he said.

“My recommendation to you as athlete representatives is that you approach your NOCs or federations and enter into a binding agreement of what are the rights and responsibilities of an athlete.”

Rule 40 is aimed at protecting the rights of the IOC’s own Olympic sponsors who contribute billions of dollars to the organisation of the Games.

Koehler, a former deputy director general of the Montreal-based World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), also replied to Bach telling athletes they did not need those “who pretend to speak on your behalf”.

“Based on what I’ve heard from the athletes, they really want people to stand up for them and to represent their rights,” he said.

Global Athlete is being funded by independent foundation FairSport along with individual donors who have no part in the decision making or operations of the movement.

The organisation, set up after a Russian doping crisis and USA Gymnastics sexual abuse scandal, aims to empower Olympic athletes.

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