The Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games
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About this ebook
Barry A. Sanders
Barry A. Sanders is the author of American Avatar: The United States in the Global Imagination. He is an adjunct professor of communication studies at UCLA and chairs the Southern California Committee for the Olympic Games. As a partner at the law firm of Latham & Watkins, he served as outside counsel to the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee.
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The Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games - Barry A. Sanders
them.
INTRODUCTION
The 1984 Games will be remembered by those with clear heads as the 16 days that preserved this rich treasure that brings together more than 200 nations every four years. . . . It saved the Games, gave the USOC a solid financial future, and created a blueprint for the future.
—Michael Moran
US Olympic Committee
Chief Spokesperson and Communications Executive
1979–2003
When the right to host the Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad, the 1984 Olympic Games, was awarded to Los Angeles in 1978, the Olympic movement was in grave trouble. Montreal had lost over $1 billion in staging the 1976 Games, and the coffers of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the US Olympic Committee (USOC) were almost bare. No other city wanted the 1984 Games. Los Angeles recognized that it had the human and physical resources to make the Olympic Games a success where others might fail. It proposed to do the Games differently, with private funding and management and with little new construction. It set out to demonstrate a Spartan
approach that would shift the spotlight from grandiose arrangements to the athletes and their achievements. The IOC, lacking any alternatives, reluctantly acceded and began a partnership with Los Angeles of increasing cordiality that yielded important athletic and financial success and, more importantly, a new worldwide perception of the Olympic Games as the ultimate validation of a city. The Olympic movement in the United States and globally was put on a new secure budget footing and a new upward trajectory.
For the people of Los Angeles, the Games were a watershed in the image that they and others have had of their unique city. Los Angeles had been the perfect Olympic city for a long time. It hosted the Games of the Xth Olympiad in 1932, which invented the idea of the Olympic Village and had a financial surplus, despite being organized in the Depression. Its year-round temperate climate and geographic variety from the mountains to the sea made it a mecca for athletes and sports activity of all kinds. Consequently, the region has always been home to a greater concentration of Olympians than any other area of the world. Its broad sports enthusiasm meant that Los Angeles already had top-quality facilities for almost the entire range of Olympic events. But the essence of Los Angeles’s qualification for the Games was more than its environment and infrastructure: it was the creativity, optimism, and individual initiative that defined the spirit of its millions of people who were and are still its chief assets. They were a mixed population from the far reaches of the world who would respond to the challenge of a great creative project. They built the world’s dream machine
in its entertainment industry and in its aerospace industry. Los Angeles, with its emphasis on individual freedom, imagination, and personal initiative, was and remains the most American of American cities.
The Games almost did not happen. Games promoters in Los Angeles knew that on an operating basis, before accounting for construction costs, prior Olympic Games had been profitable, and they were confident that a combination of increased television revenue and the use of Los Angeles’s wealth of existing facilities would avoid the deficits that had plagued earlier Games. But the public was skeptical, worried that it would be asked to pick up the tab. It adopted an initiative called No Olympic Tax
just as the leaders were engaged in persuading the IOC to award the Games to Los Angeles. Such a measure had caused Denver to lose the 1976 Winter Games after they had been awarded to that city.
The IOC saw the facts in the same way as Los Angeles voters but with contrasting results. The IOC was equally skeptical that there would be no deficit and thus all the more determined to enforce the provisions of its charter requiring the taxpayers to stand behind the Olympic Organizing Committee and pick up the tab. Squaring this circle was the difficult task of the civic leadership of Los Angeles. Through almost a year of negotiation after the Games were provisionally awarded to Los Angeles in May 1978, and in which both sides came very close to canceling the project, a unique arrangement was reached between the IOC and a private Los Angeles nonprofit called the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee (LAOOC), in which the USOC would stand in place of the government as the guarantor of any deficits.
With the suspenseful negotiations over, the LAOOC set to work to stage the Games. First, it hired Peter V. Ueberroth, a man who typified the Los Angeles qualities of private creativity, energy, and success. He assembled a team of mostly young executives from the area who also shared the personality of Los Angeles. They prepared the Games in a way that would be a great celebration while exceeding past revenues and avoiding unnecessary costs. Los Angeles had the expertise to recognize the hidden value in the television rights to the Games. LAOOC auctioned the US rights, awarding them to ABC for $225 million—the largest television rights fee for any show in history and vastly more than the $80 million fee paid for the preceding Games. Of that amount, $33.5 million went to the cash-starved IOC. LAOOC also raised over $125 million from sponsors, suppliers, and licensees to the Games—a more than sixfold increase over the amount raised from similar