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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Sean Ingle

Kirsty Coventry to swerve palaces and focus on responsibility as first female IOC president

Kirsty Coventry and Thomas Bach.
Kirsty Coventry will take over from Thomas Bach (right) as president of the IOC next week. Photograph: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP

Kirsty Coventry has promised to not let power go to her head when she becomes the first female president of the International Olympic Committee next week.

Her predecessor, Thomas Bach, would always stay in a suite paid for by the IOC at the five-star Lausanne Palace hotel, costing about £2,000 a night, whenever he was in the city. However, the Zimbabwean confirmed her family would not be following suit.

“We won’t be staying in the Palace,” she said. “I really want my kids to grow up doing the same thing that I did, making beds and doing our chores and being kids.”

Coventry, who won seven Olympic medals during her swimming career, said the significance of being the first female IOC president had hit her only when she started reading the messages of support from other women. Asked for more details, Coventry said: “I think I will start crying, so might have to do that another time. But the sentiments were really just around: ‘Thank you;’ ‘You’re such an inspiration;’ ‘This is so incredible.’

“In the last few days, I’ve started having a little bit of time to really go through or re go through some of the messages came through, and I’m now having a much greater understanding of that importance [of being appointed]. And as we get closer to the 23rd realise that, yes, it’s an exciting day, but it’s also a day with a lot of responsibility to ensure that we make and I make the right decisions. But I’m very proud of the fact that we as a membership have chosen this point in time to elect our first female president.”

Coventry also made it clear she wanted IOC members to feel free to speak their minds and had invited them to stay two extra nights in Lausanne next week to have a “pause and reflect workshop” to hear their ideas. “The way I like to lead is with collaboration,” she said. “I like people to say: ‘Yes, I had a say and this was the direction that we went.’ That way you get a really authentic buy-in.”

The 41-year-old made it clear she campaigned for the IOC job to change people’s lives for the better and not for the prestige involved. “After I was elected my husband started giggling at the breakfast table and he looked at me and he goes: ‘Do you realise you’re the most powerful person in sport?’” she said.

“And I was like: ‘What are you talking about?’ For me, it’s not about the title. It wasn’t about power. Sometimes those things get in the way and they make you focus on maybe the wrong things. It’s just not who I am.

“But I’m very proud we have elected our first female president. And I’m going to do my best to ensure that it’s a successful journey.”

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