Inside Brisbane’s bid to save the 2032 Games
This is the inside plan to resurrect the Olympic Games brand in Brisbane and regain the excitement lost after almost three years of government infighting, public protests and insular leadership.
This is the inside plan to resurrect the Olympic Games brand in Brisbane and regain the excitement lost after almost three years of government infighting, public protests and insular leadership.
This is the inside plan to resurrect the Olympic Games brand in Brisbane and regain the excitement lost after almost three years of government infighting, public protests and insular leadership.
Brisbane powerbrokers need to get on with the job and stop the in-fighting or risk an embarrassing Olympics, writes state political editor Hayden Johnson.
The Greens want to spend $6m on an amitious plan to have people swimming in the Brisbane River by 2032. VOTE IN OUR POLL
The Council of Mayors (SEQ) has taken aim at Pauline Hanson over her decision to campaign against Queensland’s bid for the 2032 Olympics, dismissing it as “self-serving political commentary”.
Five-time Olympian Natalie Cook has been appointed to a key position as Queensland’s planned bid for the 2032 Olympic Games gathers momentum.
Fresh from his triumph in the ATP Cup, hometown hero John Millman has revealed what he wants next for Brisbane, the “greatest city” in the world.
Queensland’s most influential sport stars, politicians and corporate heavy hitters are being recruited to lead the state’s bid for the 2032 Olympics. Here’s who’s in the frame.
Queensland schoolgirl sprint sensation Hilal Durmaz is so quick, she is an outside chance of making for 2020 Toyko Olympics relay team.
At a time of drought, bushfires and uncertainty, an injection of Olympic hope is just what the nation ordered. It’s about time we showed off our lovely lady on a global stage, writes Lucy Carne.
Two rival bidders will vie for the right to build a new 17,000 seat entertainment arena in the heart of Brisbane after the State Government cleared the final hurdle for the project.
It’s the one aspect of the southeast’s Olympic bid our Premier won’t discuss — but it could result in Queenslanders feeling hoodwinked, writes Steven Wardill.
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/brisbane-olympics-and-paralympics-2032/page/123