The News
Friday 29 of March 2024

Victory for Olympic athletes in Germany to promote sponsors


AP Photo,FILE - In this Friday, Aug. 5, 2016 file photo, Timo Boll carries the flag of Germany during the opening ceremony for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Athletes in Germany have scored a victory over Olympic restrictions on games-times advertising. A German federal agency says
AP Photo,FILE - In this Friday, Aug. 5, 2016 file photo, Timo Boll carries the flag of Germany during the opening ceremony for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Athletes in Germany have scored a victory over Olympic restrictions on games-times advertising. A German federal agency says "abusive" limits on Olympic promotional activities should be relaxed. The Federal Cartel Office says the Olympic Charter's rules are "too far-reaching and thus constitute abusive conduct." (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)

GENEVA (AP) — In a win for athletes over Olympic restrictions, a German federal agency ruled Wednesday that “abusive” limits on games-time promotional activities should be relaxed.

The Olympic Charter’s rules are “too far-reaching and thus constitute abusive conduct,” the Federal Cartel Office said in an initial judgment on Wednesday.

It is unclear how the ruling in International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach’s home nation could help athletes worldwide promote their personal sponsors at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

International athletes have long been frustrated by the Rule 40 bylaw , which states that “no competitor … may allow his person, name, picture or sports performances to be used for advertising purposes during the Olympic Games” without an exemption from the IOC executive board.

The German agency said athletes that do not get a direct share of International Olympic Committee revenue — worth $5.7 billion from 2013-16 — should be free to promote themselves.

“While athletes are the key figures of Olympic Games, they cannot benefit directly from the IOC’s high advertising revenue generated with official Olympic sponsors,” said Andreas Mundt, president of the federal office. “However, as the games mark the height of their sporting careers, self-marketing during the games plays a very important role.”

The existing commercial ban spans a “frozen period” of nine days before the Olympics open until three days after the closing ceremony.

In Germany, exceptions could be applied for at least three months in advance if the advertising campaign had already begun and did not use “Olympic-related terms.”

“It is now allowed to use terms like ‘medal, gold, silver, bronze, winter or summer games,’” the cartel office said.

The IOC’s position is that Rule 40 protects the exclusivity and value of the sponsor deals which help fund the games, athlete training and sports bodies worldwide.

“It ensures that the whole world can come together at the games,” the Olympic body said in a statement.

As part of the judgment, the IOC and German Olympic committee agreed to concessions that “considerably enhance advertising opportunities for German athletes and their sponsors.”

Athletes in Germany can now use some Olympic language and images from competitive events, and use social media more freely, including to thank sponsors.

The IOC said it welcomed the ruling’s acceptance that stopping ambush marketing is a legitimate aim.

“With its decision, the (agency) recognized that there are legitimate reasons for restricting individual athletes’ advertising opportunities in order to ensure the ongoing organization of the Olympic Games,” the IOC said. “At the same time, any implementation of Rule 40 at the national level necessarily has to take all applicable laws and regulations as well as pertinent case law into account, in this instance, particular German case law.”

The revised guidelines will stay in place through the 2026 Winter Olympics, the IOC said.

The IOC’s statement did not address questions about how the German ruling could affect keeping the stricter version of Rule 40 in other countries.

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