"Quite simply the Games are the biggest opportunity sport in this country has ever had. It is one that we must not squander"
About this Quote
Coe’s sentence is a pressure tactic disguised as plain common sense. “Quite simply” pretends the argument is self-evident, as if only negligence could disagree. Then he goes maximal: “the biggest opportunity sport in this country has ever had.” It’s not just a pitch for funding or attention; it’s an attempt to make the Olympics (and the machinery around them) feel like a once-in-a-century national turning point. That superlative does cultural work: it crowds out rival priorities by implying there’s nothing comparable on the table.
The key word is “opportunity,” a politician’s favorite solvent. Opportunity can mean medals and elite pathways, but it also smuggles in regeneration, tourism, global prestige, corporate partnerships, and a legacy story that justifies extraordinary spending. Coe, an ex-athlete turned power-broker, knows the Olympics aren’t won only on tracks and pitches; they’re won in planning documents and headline frames. By centering “sport” rather than “infrastructure” or “security,” he laundered a massive civic project through something emotionally cleaner.
“It is one that we must not squander” tightens the moral screw. “Squander” implies waste, incompetence, even betrayal - not just a bad outcome, but a shameful one. The “we” recruits the public into shared responsibility, while also distributing blame in advance: if the legacy disappoints, it won’t be because expectations were overinflated, but because someone failed to seize the moment. In the London 2012 context, this is crisis management via rhetoric: sell urgency, pre-empt skepticism, and turn a complicated gamble into a test of national will.
The key word is “opportunity,” a politician’s favorite solvent. Opportunity can mean medals and elite pathways, but it also smuggles in regeneration, tourism, global prestige, corporate partnerships, and a legacy story that justifies extraordinary spending. Coe, an ex-athlete turned power-broker, knows the Olympics aren’t won only on tracks and pitches; they’re won in planning documents and headline frames. By centering “sport” rather than “infrastructure” or “security,” he laundered a massive civic project through something emotionally cleaner.
“It is one that we must not squander” tightens the moral screw. “Squander” implies waste, incompetence, even betrayal - not just a bad outcome, but a shameful one. The “we” recruits the public into shared responsibility, while also distributing blame in advance: if the legacy disappoints, it won’t be because expectations were overinflated, but because someone failed to seize the moment. In the London 2012 context, this is crisis management via rhetoric: sell urgency, pre-empt skepticism, and turn a complicated gamble into a test of national will.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sports |
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