Rogge hopes for more US television money

“We would hope to get more TV revenue because the TV rights  are very important,” Rogge said in an interview with Reuters yesterday. “We hope to have these revenues. Time will tell. The  negotiations will be interesting.”

Rogge’s remarks about the IOC’s biggest single revenue deal  are the first time the IOC has mentioned a possible increase  following a slump in the U.S. advertising market over the past  two years.

Russia’s Sochi will host the 2014 Winter Olympics while Rio  de Janeiro will stage the 2016 Summer Games.

The U.S. broadcaster NBC paid $2.2 billion for the rights to  the Vancouver 2010 Winter Games and the London 2012 Summer  Olympics with industry officials expecting a lower figure for  the next two-Games package.

Rogge has hinted recently that negotiations could take place  next year after initially saying the process could be put off  until after the 2012 London Olympics.

The head of NBC Universal sports Dick Ebersol, who will bid  again along with most, if not all, major U.S. broadcasters said  in September it could even be in the first quarter of 2011.

Rogge, in South Africa for an international sports  conference, said he was satisfied with the IOC’s Olympic host  selection process, after world soccer’s governing body FIFA was  criticised for its procedures in picking the 2018 and 2022 World  Cup hosts.

Andy Anson, head of England’s failed World Cup bid, said   FIFA needed to change its voting system after the decision to  award the soccer World Cup to Russia in 2018 and to Qatar in  2022.

“I think we have taken the necessary measures to have a  transparent and accountable voting process, and a clean one,”  Rogge said.

“Our rules are very stringent. Bidding committees cannot  visit the IOC members, IOC members cannot visit the bidding  city.

“We have a very strong evaluation system where everything is  very well analysed. We have a very strong ethics commission that  does not hesitate to expel people whenever there is a sign of  misconduct.

“I think we have a very fair and clear voting process which  is very transparent. It is a secret vote because you have to  protect the member and the voter from undue influence.

“But it is checked by an external audit company so I have no  concerns about that,” added Rogge, who will step down in 2013  after 12 years in charge.

The IOC moved swiftly after allegations aired in a British  television documentary that three long-standing members of  FIFA’s executive committee had received bribes from the body’s  marketing partners ISL.

One of those members was Issa Hayatou, president of the  African Soccer Confederation, who is also an IOC member.

Even though there was no direct Olympic connection, the IOC  launched its own investigation into the allegations.