*All times CAT (GMT+2)

Athletics | International

Usain Bolt © Gallo Images

Bolt joins cause for track athletes



Jamaican Olympic champion Usain Bolt is among those joining a group of US track and field athletes fighting a rule that bars Olympians from using their names or likenesses for advertising during the Games.

The Track and Field Athletes Association, which includes high-profile American runners such as Sanya Richards-Ross and Bernard Lagat, announced Friday it had added international athletes.

The athletes are opposed to Rule 40, an International Olympic Committee rule that prohibits Olympic athletes from advertising in the days leading up to and during the Games.

In welcoming Bolt, Yohan Blake, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, 800-metre world record holder David Rudisha and 19 others from around the world, TFAA president Khadevis Robinson said, "in order to grow our sport, we must establish a unified voice across the international community of athletes."

Asked about the issue at the US Olympic Committee assembly Friday, CEO Scott Blackmun said he was sympathetic to what the athletes are trying to do.

"We'd like to find ways for the athletes to benefit from their success at the Olympic Games," Blackmun said. "We also understand there's a critical need to protect the exclusivity" of the Olympic brand.



Comments

More expert analysis and opinion from Sport24
The opinions expressed by Sport24 experts and bloggers are theirs alone, and do not necessarily represent those of SuperSport

Sports Talk



Gary Sobel (Physio)
Comrades training - May 2013
The main goal of the month of May leading up to Comrades is to get to that start line injury free!...

Reuters on Athletics
Hitting the trail with elite runner Zola Budd
My running partner has generously conceded to my pace and it's not because of the warmth of the...