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New York, San Fran make 2012 games cut

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Posted 6:37AM on Wednesday 28th August 2002 ( 22 years ago )
CHICAGO - Imagine watching Olympic fireworks explode over the Golden Gate Bridge or seeing athletes cruise the New York City harbor on their way to the opening ceremony. <br> <br> The U.S. Olympic Committee certainly can. <br> <br> Selecting cities it thinks has the international panache to win the Olympics, a USOC task force Tuesday chose San Francisco and New York as the American finalists for the 2012 Summer Games. Houston and Washington were passed over.<br> <br> ``This was a question of riches, and picking the two cities we felt have the best chance of winning the international competition,&#39;&#39; said Charles H. Moore, a former Olympic gold medalist who heads the bid evaluation task force. <br> <br> ``We are very confident we will bring the games to the United States in 2012.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> The USOC&#39;s board of directors will select one city on Nov. 3 to be its 2012 bidder. That candidate will then face as many as a dozen international cities, including possibly Toronto, Rome, Paris, Moscow and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The International Olympic Committee will pick the host in 2005. <br> <br> An American city could be a long shot for a variety of reasons. The United States has held two Olympics in the past six years, and the IOC might want to go somewhere new.<br> <br> Also, Vancouver, British Columbia, is a favorite for the 2010 Winter Games, and the IOC might hesitate to put two games in North America so close to each other. <br> <br> Then there&#39;s the recent history of U.S. Olympics. The Atlanta Games had so many problems that former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch called them ``most exceptional,&#39;&#39; rather than the ``best ever&#39;&#39; designation accorded other Olympics. <br> <br> The Salt Lake City bribery scandal - Salt Lake City organizers plied IOC members with more than $1 million in gifts and scholarships - generated congressional hearings. Congress even brought in Samaranch for questioning, angering many IOC members. <br> <br> But none of that deters New York and San Francisco organizers.<br> <br> ``New York offers the Olympic movement the chance to tell a powerful Olympic story,&#39;&#39; said Dan Doctoroff, New York&#39;s deputy mayor for economic development and former head of NYC 2012. ``It represents the best of what the Olympics is all about, an international city where various nationalities interact peacefully every day.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> The task force spent hundreds of hours visiting cities and analyzing bids the past 15 months. Members had a scorecard for each of the final four cities, using a scale of 1 to 10 to grade various factors ranging from venues to environmental impact. <br> <br> The rankings were converted into ordinals for Tuesday&#39;s meeting, where task force members pitted the cities against each other for the first time. That was too close to determine a winner, so Moore said it ultimately came down to the cities that can be the most successful on the international stage. <br> <br> ``We&#39;re dealing with how we think the IOC, all 126 votes, will come out,&#39;&#39; Moore said. <br> <br> New York and San Francisco have worldwide appeal, favorite destinations for American and foreign tourists. Each has a certain magic, too, whether it&#39;s the Golden Gate Bridge or the Statue of Liberty. <br> <br> ``In the end, I think the reason we&#39;re one of the two is that they looked around at eight million New Yorkers and they realized this is the city that best represents the Olympics,&#39;&#39; Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. <br> <br> ``And this is the city where we have safety, where we have transportation, where we have facilities, where we have a can-do attitude, where the people would love to have people from around the world come.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> Though New York still needs to build or renovate many venues, Moore said it received high marks for infrastructure. New York is the nation&#39;s largest city, and organizers say it is best equipped to handle and move large crowds. <br> <br> All venues would be accessible by rail or water, with organizers saying athletes would never even have to be on a roadway. Despite the Sept. 11 attacks, Moore said the task force had no concerns about New York&#39;s security. <br> <br> San Francisco&#39;s weather, waterfront and scenic vistas highlight the city&#39;s bid. Organizers hope the Golden Gate Bridge will be the Olympics&#39; signature emblem, as Sydney&#39;s Opera House was during the 2000 Games. <br> <br> Officials initially spread venues from the Bay area to Sacramento, but now 92 percent of the venues would be within 32 miles of the Olympic Village. <br> <br> ``Going forward, we feel good about our bid,&#39;&#39; said Anne Cribbs, a former Olympian and head of the Bay Area Sports Organizing Committee. ``And we&#39;re excited to make our case to the USOC&#39;s board of directors.&#39;&#39;

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