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Olympics

U.S. athletes praise Paris Games prize money plan

Portraits at the Team USA media summit ahead of the Paris Olympics and Paralympics, at an

World Athletics' (WA) plan to offer prize money to Olympic gold medallists is a much needed step in the right direction, said American track and field athletes, with the high costs of training and competition weighing on competitors.

WA President Sebastian Coe bucked 128 years of tradition when he said last week that the athletics governing body would pay gold medal winners in Paris $50,000, a move that athletes were quick to endorse.

"You can lose money in track and field as soon as you step out the door," Tara Davis-Woodhall, the indoor world champion in long jump, told reporters this week at the Team USA Media Summit in New York.

Davis-Woodhall said even travelling to competitions presents a major financial burden for many athletes.

"If I don't have a sponsorship, who's going to pay for this? I'm going to go in debt like 100%," said Davis-Woodhall, who won a silver medal at the 2023 world championships in Budapest. "It's not a sustainable thing to do at all."

Under the WA plan, a $2.4 million prize pot will be split between the 48 athletics gold medallists at the Paris Games, which start on July 26.

Silver and bronze medal winners will also receive prize funds beginning at the Los Angeles Games in 2028.

"It's about time," said Olympic 200 metres silver medallist Kenny Bednarek. "You have athletes that work their butt off, blood, sweat and tears every single day, every single year. And, you know, some compensation is needed for them."

Their remarks echoed the endorsement of United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) CEO Sarah Hirshland, who applauded the plan.

"Any time we can put resources in the hands of athletes, we should all celebrate," Hirshland told reporters in New York on Monday.

"We need more resources to get into the hands of athletes, so that they have both the ability to sustain themselves from a just day-to-day lifestyle perspective, but then also (to) continue to invest in their training."

But the prize money plan has attracted plenty of criticism from other corners of international sport.

British Olympic Association chief Andy Anson told Sky Sports on Wednesday that World Athletics created a problem by moving unilaterally on the issue.

The head of cycling's global governing body said on Tuesday that WA had gone against the Olympic spirit, while World Rowing head Jean-Christophe Rolland said he wished WA had discussion with other sports, saying the decision has "other implications."

Twice Olympic shot put champion Ryan Crouser said he struggles to see how anyone could oppose the prize money.

"I know athletes that have medalled at world championships are still working two jobs and living with a room mate," the world record holder said.

"It's just the misconception that kind of lingers that athletes, regardless of what level you're at, if you're making the Olympics, that you're that you're financially secure and you are absolutely not."